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Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union
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Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Chapter 10:Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions

De Grauwe:Economics of Monetary Union

Page 2: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

France Germany

YF

YG

PF PG

DF

D’F

D’G

DG

SF

SG

Fiscal policies and the theory of optimum currency areas

Page 3: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• France and Germany form monetary and budgetary union – If asymmetric shock occurs– The centralized European budget automatically

redistributes income from Germany to France– There is risk sharing

• France and Germany form a monetary union without budgetary union– If asymmetric shock occurs– France accumulates budget deficits and debt – Germany reduces deficits and debt

Two cases

Page 4: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

– If capital markets are integrated French government borrowing eased by increased German supply of savings

– Future generations of Frenchmen pay for the hardship of today’s Frenchmen

– Issue of sustainability

• Note that the insurance system (whether centralized or decentralized) should only be used to take care of temporary shocks

Page 5: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The theory of optimum currency areas leads to the following implications:– It is desirable to centralize a significant part of the

national budgets to the European level – Risk sharing reduces social costs of a monetary

union – If such a centralization of the national government

budgets in a monetary union is not possible then, national fiscal policies should be used in a flexible way and national budgetary authorities should enjoy autonomy

Page 6: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The view expressed in the OCA-theory has not prevailed

• Instead rigid rules have been imposed • These find origin in the view that the

systematic use of fiscal policies can lead to unsustainable debts and deficits

Page 7: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Sustainability of government budget deficits

• A budget deficit leads to an increase in government debt which will have to be serviced in the future

• Government budget constraint:G - T + rB = dB/dt + dM/dt

– G is the level of government spending (excluding interest payments on the government debt), T is the tax revenue, r is the interest rate on the government debt, B, and M is the level of high-powered money (monetary base)

– (G - T) is the primary budget deficit, rB is the interest payment on the government debt

– The budget deficit can be financed by issuing debt (dB/dt) or by issuing high-powered money dM/dt

Page 8: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• where g = G/Y, t = T/Y, x = Y/Y (the growth rate of GDP), and

• When the interest rate on government debt exceeds the growth rate of GDP, the debt-to-GDP ratio will increase without bounds

• The dynamics of debt accumulation can only be stopped if the primary budget deficit (as a percentage of GDP) turns into a surplus

• Alternatively, it can be stopped by seigniorage

The dynamics of debt accumulation

mbxrtgb )()(

YMm /

Page 9: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The debt-to-GDP ratio stabilizes at a constant value if

• If nominal interest rate > the nominal growth rate of the economy:– Either the primary budget shows a sufficiently high

surplus (t > g) – Or money creation is sufficiently high in order to

stabilize the debt - GDP ratio – The latter option has been chosen by many Latin

American countries during the 1980s, and more recently by some Eastern European countries. It has also led to hyperinflation in these countries

mgtbxr )()(

Page 10: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• Important conclusion is that, if a country has accumulated sizeable deficits in the past, it will now have to run large primary budget surpluses in order to prevent the debt - GDP ratio from increasing automatically

• This means that the country will have to reduce spending and/or increase taxes

Page 11: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Government Budget Deficits in Belgium, The Netherlands, and Italy (1979 – 2005)

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004

Belgium

Italy

Netherlands

Page 12: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Gross Public Debt (% of GDP)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004

Belgium

Italy

Netherlands

Page 13: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Government budget surplus, excluding interest payments (% of GDP)

-8

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8

1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004

Belgium

Italy

Netherlands

Page 14: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The experience of these countries shows that large government budget deficits quickly lead to an unsustainable debt dynamics

• Fiscal policies are not the flexible instrument • There is a lot of inertia• The systematic use of this instrument quickly

leads to problems of sustainability, which forces countries to run budget surpluses for a number of years

Page 15: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Stability and Growth Pact • Main principles

– Countries have to achieve balanced budgets over the business cycle

– Countries with a budget deficit > 3% of GDP will be subject to fines. These fines can reach up to 0.5% of GDP

– These fines will not be applied if the countries in question experience exceptional circumstances, e.g. a natural disaster or a decline of their GDP of more than 2% during one year

– In cases where the drop in GDP is between 0.75 and 2% the application of the fine will be subject to the approval of the EU finance ministers

Page 16: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

The argument for rules on government budget deficits

• A country with an unsustainable increasing government debt creates negative spillover effects for the rest of the monetary union

• First, such country will have increasing recourse to the capital markets of the union– The union interest rate increases– This higher union interest rate increases the burden

of the government debts of the other countries – These will be forced to follow more restrictive fiscal

policies

Page 17: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• A second spillover:– The upward movement of the union interest rate is

likely to put pressure on the ECB to relax its monetary policy stance

Page 18: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Criticism is based on efficient markets

• If the capital markets work efficiently, there will be no spillover: – There will be different interest rates in the union,

reflecting different risk premia on the government debt of the union members

– It does not make sense to talk about the union interest rate

Page 19: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Is this criticism valid?

• There is interdependence in the risk of bonds issued by different governments because within EMU, governments are likely to bail out a defaulting member state

• Thus, financial markets may find it difficult to price these risks correctly

• The ‘no-bailout’ clause introduced in the Maastricht Treaty may not be credible

• Mutual control to avoid costly bailouts is necessary

Page 20: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Government budget deficits in Eurozone, US, UK, Japan

-6

-4

-2

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

EUR-12

US

JP

UK

Page 21: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

The Stability and Growth Pact: an evaluation

• Two conflicting concerns: – The first one has to do with flexibility and is

stressed in the theory of optimum currency areas: in the absence of the exchange rate instrument and a centralized European budget, national government budgets are the only available instruments for nation-states to confront asymmetric shocks

– A second concern relates to the spillover effects of unsustainable national debts and deficits

Page 22: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The Pact has been guided more by the fear of unsustainable debts and deficits than by the need for flexibility

• As a result, the Pact is quite unbalanced in stressing the need for strict rules at the expense of flexibility

• This creates a risk that the capacity of national budgets to function as automatic stabilizers during recessions will be hampered, thereby intensifying recessions

Page 23: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• Lack of budgetary flexibility to face recessions creates a potential for tensions between national governments and European institutions

• This tension exists at two levels:– As countries are hindered in their desire to use the

automatic stabilizers in their budgets during recessions, they increase their pressure on the ECB to relax monetary policies

– When countries are hit by economic hardship, EU institutions are perceived as preventing the alleviation of the hardship of those hit by the recession intensifying Euro-scepticism

Page 24: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The flaws of the Stability and Growth Pact we just described led to serious problems in 2002– 4

• Major Eurozone countries were hit by an economic downturn. This led to an increase of the budget deficits of France, Germany, Italy, and Portugal

• In the name of the Pact, the European Commission insisted that these countries should return to budget balance even in the midst of a declining business cycle

Page 25: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• A number of countries, in particular France and Germany, refused to submit their economy to such deflationary policies

• The result was an inevitable clash with the European Commission which, as the guardian of the Pact, felt obliged to start procedures against these countries

Page 26: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• The Commission had to yield to the unwillingness of these countries to subject their policies and their commitments towards the increasing number of unemployed to the rule of the mythical number 3

• In November 2003 the Council of Ministers abrogated the procedure that the European Commission had started. For all practical purposes the Pact had become a dead letter

Page 27: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

How to reform the Stability and Growth Pact?

• More flexibility is required. This flexibility should be achieved at two levels:– The judgment of whether budget deficits are

excessive should be based on the debt levels of individual countries

– The analysis of the budgetary situation should be based on the structural budget deficits

Page 28: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

• Finally, the requirement that countries should have balanced budgets on average implies that the debt to GDP ratio is pushed to zero

• There is no valid economic argument to force countries to bring their debt ratio to zero

• Requirement to bring the debt ratio to zero gives strong political incentives to reduce government investment:– Governments are required to finance all new

investments by current taxation

Page 29: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

– A large part of the benefits of these investments will be reaped by future governments

– This gives an incentive to governments today to reduce these investments and only spend on items that benefit the present voters

– Thus the GSP is likely to lead to lower government investments and thus lower growth

Page 30: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Debt to GDP ra tio unde r SGP

0

20

40

60

80

100

1202

00

2

20

05

20

08

20

11

20

14

20

17

20

20

20

23

20

26

20

29

20

32

20

35

20

38

20

41

20

44

20

47

20

50

De

bt/

GD

P

B

D

EL

E

F

IRL

I

NL

A

P

FIN

Hypothetical evolution of the debt ratios within Euroland assuming that the member countries abide by the pact, and assuming that nominal GDP increases by 5% a year.

Page 31: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

The Reform Proposals

• On March 22-23, 2005, the European Council agreed to a reform of the Stability Pact

• The main elements in this reform are the following:– First, countries with a low debt ratio (and a high

growth potential) are allowed to maintain a deficit of 1% over the business cycle. The other countries have to maintain a balanced budget over the business cycle. The 3% budget deficit ceiling, however, is maintained for all countries.

Page 32: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

– Second, while in the old Stability Pact countries could exceed the 3% deficit ceiling when GDP declined by 2% or more, this condition will be relaxed in the new Stability Pact. It will be enough to have a negative growth rate or a “protracted period of very low growth relative to potential growth” to be allowed to (temporarily) exceed the 3% limit.

Page 33: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

– Third, countries will be able to invoke more special circumstances for exceeding the 3% ceiling. For example, investment programs, pension reforms that increase the debt today while improving the future sustainability of government finances will be accepted as special circumstances allowing for a temporary breach of the 3% rule.

– Finally, countries which exceed the 3% ceiling but have low debt levels will be allowed to stretch the adjustment over a longer period than countries with a high debt level.

Page 34: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Evaluation

• The proposals go in the right direction of targeting the debt levels and allowing more flexibility

• However, by keeping the 3% rule but allowing for many exceptions, the proposals have laid a minefield for future discussions and conflicts

Page 35: Chapter 10: Fiscal Policies in Monetary Unions De Grauwe: Economics of Monetary Union.

Conclusion

• Two views about how national fiscal policies should be conducted in a monetary union: – National fiscal authorities should maintain a

sufficient amount of flexibility and autonomy (theory of optimum currency areas)

– The conduct of fiscal policies in the monetary union has to be disciplined by explicit rules on the size of the national budget deficits (Stability and Growth Pact)

• Strong criticism against the Stability and Growth Pact for its excessive rigidity

• This has led to a reform of the SGP which provides for more flexibility