The Maastricht treaty decrees that as long as a country meets the
twin criteria of the ‘excessive deficit procedure’ (a government
budget deficit below 3% and public debt below 60% of GDP), its public
finances will be regarded as ‘sustainable’. But neither the treaty
nor the Stability Pact provide clear guidance for evaluating the public
finances of a country violating these criteria – for judging whether
it has taken adequate adjustment measures and whether it is moving in
the right direction.
Since many of the EMU countries violate the twin criteria, a more
operational interpretation of sustainability is needed to judge a
country’s readiness for EMU membership and to monitor members’
public finances once EMU begins. A recent CEPR Report by Roberto Perotti,
Rolf Strauch and Jürgen von Hagen formulates such a definition, one
that rests on four principles: controllability; attacking the problem at
source; a distinction between short-run symptoms and long-run sources of
non-sustainable deficits; and the proposition that institutional
weaknesses are the sources of such deficits.
The Report argues that policy-makers are usually more concerned about
situations where governments lose control of spending and are heading
towards an unavoidable, disruptive adjustment than about any
particular level of public debts or deficits. It is precisely such
sudden adjustments that might cause difficulties for the conduct of
monetary policy under EMU. The Report’s interpretation of
sustainability thus focuses on the issue of control over government
spending, revenues and the deficit rather than a vague intertemporal
budget constraint. The implication is that a sustainable deficit
reduction is one by which the government regains reliable and lasting
control over its budget.
Empirical evidence suggests that if fiscal consolidations are to
achieve lasting success, they must attack the problem at its source. A
non-sustainable deficit can usually be traced back to one or two
critical elements of the budget, such as wage expenditures or transfers.
Successful fiscal consolidations achieve a significant reduction in
those elements. This implies that any assessment of the sustainability
of a country’s public finances requires a disaggregate view of its
government budget – one that determines on which side of the budget
the deficit emerged and under which budget items.
But budget numbers can only be the symptoms of non-sustainable fiscal
policies. Behind the numbers are the real causes of the problem, which
are usually linked to weaknesses in a country’s economic policy
institutions. Most importantly, flaws in the decision-making rules and
practices regarding public monies lead to the emergence of excessive
spending and deficits.
The Report considers two aspects of this: fragmentation of the budget
process; and the spread of ‘non-decisions’ coupled with weaknesses
in other economic policy institutions. The former occurs when
representatives of particular spending interests are allowed to make
spending decisions without considering the full cost of public policy
programmes. Empirical evidence suggests that fragmentation is an
important source of excessive government deficits.
Fragmentation can be overcome by strengthening elements of
centralization in the budget process – designing rules and
institutions that force policy-makers to take a comprehensive view of
the costs and benefits of their programmes. There are two important
approaches in practice: delegation of significant budgetary powers to a
‘strong’ finance minister; and the use of contracts focusing on
spending and deficit targets among the relevant decision-makers.
Non-decisions occur in the budget process when governments leave the
determination of spending and deficits to variables outside their direct
control. Examples are the indexation of spending programmes and fixing
the parameters of entitlements by laws outside the budget process. Such
non-decisions reduce the budget process to a mere forecasting exercise
of exogenous events, while allowing policy-makers to avoid tough
decisions that might be unpopular with their constituencies.
In the context of sustainability, non-decisions make the
controllability of the budget depend on the qualities of institutions
outside the annual budget process, for example, labour market or welfare
institutions. This implies that where non-decisions cannot be
eliminated, the reform of other economic policy institutions must become
an important element of the process of restoring sustainability. The
European Council has recently recognized this principle by asking the
Italian government to undertake reform of its national pension system as
a condition for entering EMU.
The Report concludes that institutional reforms are an important part
of a country’s effort to regain sustainability, and that governments
can and should be asked to undertake such reforms when they have
violated the twin criteria. How does this framework suggest that
assessment of a country’s public finances should proceed? The Report
proposes a five stage process:
- Does the country’s deficit show a sufficient change in the right
direction, where ‘sufficient’ means at least 0.5% of GDP? If
not, the country remains at stage 0.
- A sufficient move in the correct direction has occurred. Has the
country reduced (increased) the ratio of spending (revenues) to GDP
by at least two-thirds of the increase (decline) it experienced in
the years when the deficit emerged?
- Sufficient action on the right side of the budget has been taken.
Has the country reduced (reversed the decline of) the principal
elements of spending (revenues) that led to the growth of spending
(decline in revenues) during the emergence of the deficit?
- Sufficient action has been taken to address the symptoms of the
deficit. Has the government identified the institutional weaknesses
leading to the emergence of the deficit and addressed them, at least
informally?
- The underlying weaknesses have been identified. Has the government
engaged in institutional reforms to overcome these weaknesses?
These stages need not follow in a strict sequence but instead
represent qualitative stages of the process. The questions at stages 0,
1 and 2 are straightforward to answer on the basis of budgetary
statistics. The questions at stages 3 and 4 are more difficult to
assess, rely on more qualitative information and can lead to more
contentious debate. In view of this, the Report advocates that a country
should not be declared to have regained sustainability unless it passes
stage 2 at least.
Applying this procedure does not result in a tightening of the
Stability Pact’s excessive deficit procedure. Instead, it provides a
broader and more qualitative approach than the Pact’s focus on
aggregate budget numbers. The keys to sustainability are a disaggregate
view of the budget and a close scrutiny of institutions.
Following EU traditions, it may be argued that the monetary union has
no business interfering with a member’s public finances, and much less
with its economic policy institutions. But, the Report concludes, if
sustainability is an important condition for the success of EMU, it must
be accepted that the EMU members have a legitimate interest in
monitoring the fiscal policies of their fellow members at a level that
goes beyond the aggregate deficit, and to demand structural and
institutional adjustments where necessary.
This article summarizes ‘Sustainability of Public Finances’ by
Roberto Perotti, Rolf Strauch and Jürgen von Hagen, a Report published
by CEPR and the Zentrum für Europäische Integrationsforschung (ZEI).
Perotti is at Columbia University; Strauch at ZEI, Universität Bonn;
and von Hagen at ZEI and Indiana University. Perotti and von Hagen are
Research Fellows in CEPR’s International Macroeconomics programme.