Antonio Fatás (INSEAD, Fontainebleu and CEPR)
examines whether there is a need for European fiscal federation in the
EMU area in a chapter in a new book published by Blackwell Publishers
for CEPR (London), CES (Munich) and DELTA (Paris), entitled EMU:
Prospects and Challenges for the Euro.
Concerns have been expressed that the future adoption
of a single currency among some members of the European Union will limit
their ability to deal with asymmetric shocks (i.e. shocks that are
idiosyncratic to either regions or countries). Since prices and wages
are not flexible enough to compensate for the loss of exchange rates and
the degree of labour mobility in Europe is very limited, there is a fear
that asymmetric shocks could lead to deep regional recessions and large
increases in unemployment, which could create a social burden that would
be politically unacceptable to many governments.
Fatás explores the example of the US, where
automatic inter-regional transfers take place through the federal
budget. These transfers play an insurance role that compensates for the
lack of internal exchange rates. This has been presented as an example
of a tax system that helps to alleviate the costs associated with a
single currency. The estimates of the benefits of inter-regional
transfers in the US are large. A fall in state income causes transfers
(or reductions in taxes) that amount to between 30% and 40% of the
original fall in income. The absence of a European fiscal federation
thus represents an additional element that highlights the lack of
significant adjustment mechanisms in EMU to asymmetric shocks.
Fatás presents four sets of findings that suggest
that the benefits associated with the creation of a European fiscal
federation are much smaller than previously thought.
- First, some of the previous estimates of the amount of interstate
insurance provided by the US federal budget overestimate the true
amount of insurance by a factor of 3. This is because the original
estimates measured the stabilization effect of the tax system on
disposable state income and not the degree of insurance. The two are
equivalent only under the assumption that there is no aggregate risk
in the federation.
- When a state suffers a recession, and the fall in its tax revenues
is not compensated by revenue increases coming from other states,
the federal budget will run a deficit that will need to be paid in
the future by all states. As a result, the state in a recession does
not benefit as much as indicated by the smoothing of disposable
income and, moreover, the other states suffer because of the future
tax payments.
Fatás applies the same reasoning to data from
countries of the European Union and finds estimates of insurance
potential that are very close to those for the US.
- A European-wide fiscal system that managed to reduce the
volatility of disposable income by 30% would only provide less than
10% insurance. The other two-thirds would be intertemporal
stabilization through countercyclical budgets, a tool that is
already available to European countries and will be available to
future member countries of EMU.
This result has clear policy implications. It
highlights the importance of maintaining the future flexibility in
conducting fiscal policy at the national level, and signals the possible
costs of the Stability and Growth Pact. If government deficits are
constrained by the limits of the stability pact, the ability of the
current national systems to adjust to shocks through intertemporal
transfers will disappear.
Under this scenario, there will be a much greater
need for a European fiscal federation because, in the absence of
national fiscal policies, the benefits of a European fiscal federation
will also include the intertemporal stabilization role that the national
systems, constrained by the Stability and Growth Pact, will not be able
to play.
- Second, Europe already has national tax systems that partially
insure regions from idiosyncratic risk. Fatás estimates the
importance of these systems by comparing the current system with a
hypothetical European-wide system that would replicate the
stabilizing properties of the national systems. He finds that the
current national systems insure more than 50% of a European fiscal
federation.
- Third, he finds some evidence that the potential insurance
benefits of a European fiscal federation have decreased over time.
In the post-EMS period, because of increased correlations across
countries, the potential for insurance of a European fiscal
federation has been reduced. If, as a consequence of EMU, this trend
persists in the future the insurance possibilities of a fiscal
federation will continue to fall.
- Fourth, he examines cross-country differences with respect to the
insurance benefits that a European fiscal federation would provide.
These benefits are a function of the amount of risk that different
countries have and the correlation with the European aggregate. Some
countries – the UK or Ireland – could greatly benefit from the
system, but others – France or Austria – could benefit much
less. This implies that if these countries are offered the
possibility of joining the federation, they might decline, which
will in turn reduce the overall insurance possibilities of the
federation. If all countries are forced into the system the only
solution to solve this tension is to have a different risk premium
for different countries depending on their volatility. This
asymmetry adds to the already complicated design of the system and
would make its implementation even more problematic.
Fatás concludes from his analysis that the potential
to provide additional inter-regional insurance by creating a European
fiscal federation is modest. He finds it difficult to argue that these
benefits can compensate the many problems associated with the design and
implementation of a European fiscal federation.
Notes for Editors:
Reporting is embargoed until 00.01, 20 April 1998
We gratefully acknowledge the support of Salomon
Smith Barney in launching this book.
EMU: Prospects and Challenges for the Euro is a
special issue of the review, Economic Policy: A European Forum. It
contains revised versions of the papers presented to the Twenty-Sixth
Economic Policy Panel Meeting held in Bonn on 17/18 October 1997, with
the support of the Zentrum für Europäische Integrations-forschung. The
Economic Policy Panel meets twice annually to discuss papers that are
specially commissioned by the editors to provide timely and
authoritative analyses of the choices confronting policy-makers. The
articles use the best of modern economic analysis, but are easily
accessible to a wide audience and highly readable. Each paper is
discussed by a rotating Panel of distinguished economists whose comments
are published to provide the reader with alternative interpretations of
the evidence and a sense of the liveliness of the current debate.
Economic Policy is published in association with the
European Economic Association for the Centre for Economic Policy
Research, the Center for Economic Studies of the University of Munich
and the Département et Laboratoire d’Economie Théorique et Appliquée
(DELTA), in collaboration with the Maison des Sciences de l’Homme.
Antonio Fatás is Associate Professor of Economics
and Coordinator of the Economic and Political Sciences Department at
INSEAD, Fontainebleau. He is also a Research Fellow in CEPR’s
International Macroeconomics programme.
For further information about The Centre For Economic
Policy Research, please contact Rita Gilbert, External Relations
Manager, Tel 44 20 7878 2917; Fax 44 20 7878 2999; Email rgilbert@cepr.org
EMU: Prospects and
Challenges for the Euro
Embargo date: 00.01, 20 April 1998
Blackwell Publishers
for CEPR, CES and DELTA
ISBN: 0631 209972
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