In a lunchtime
meeting organized by CEPR and ECARE in Brussels on 23 June,
Professor Jürgen von Hagen (Universität Bonn, Zentrum für Europäische
Integrationsforschung (ZEI) and CEPR) stated that "a basic tenet in
the move to European Monetary Union is that monetary stability requires
the ‘sustainability’ of public finances". Professor von Hagen
based his talk on a new report (co-authored with Roberto Perotti and
Rolf Strauch), published by CEPR and ZEI, entitled Sustainability
of Public Finances. Professor von Hagen concluded that
institutional reforms are an important part of a county’s effort to
regain sustainability, and that governments can and should be asked to
undertake such reforms when they have violated the double standards.
The fiscal criteria of the Maastricht Treaty render a dichotomous
interpretation of sustainability and von Hagen argued that the Treaty
gives no clear guidance for evaluating the public finances of a country
violating these criteria, i.e., for judging whether or not it has taken
adequate measures of adjustment, and whether or not it is moving in the
right direction. These questions are also left open by the more recent
Stability and Growth Pact. As the beginning of EMU draws nearer, a more
developed interpretation of sustainability is necessary to guide the
judgements regarding a country's readiness for membership in EMU, and
for a continuous monitoring of members' public finances once EMU has
started.
Von Hagen outlined a practical framework for evaluating
sustainability. Policy-makers tend worry more about situations where
governments lose control of spending and deficits and are heading
towards an unavoidable, disruptive adjustment than about any particular
level of public debt. Thus, the report’s interpretation of
sustainability focuses particularly on the issue of controllability and
considers a sustainable deficit reduction where the government reliably
and lastingly regains control over its budget.
There is overwhelming empirical evidence demonstrating that the
lasting success of fiscal consolidations depends critically on following
the principle of attacking the problem at the source. Successful, i.e.
lasting, fiscal consolidations come with a significant reduction in
those elements that led to the emergence of a fiscal problem in the
first place. An implication is that an assessment of the sustainability
of a country's public finances requires a disaggregate view of its
government budget, since just looking at aggregate spending, revenues
and the deficit is insufficient for making a valid assessment.
However, budget numbers can only be the symptoms of non-sustainable
fiscal policies. Behind these numbers are the real causes which can
commonly be linked to weaknesses of a country's economic policy
institutions. Fragmentation of the budget process and the spreading of
non-decisions are the most prevailing institutional deficiencies.
Fragmentation of the budget process occurs, when representatives of
particular spending interests in society are allowed to make spending
decisions. Hence, fragmentation can be overcome by strengthening rules
and institutions of the budget process that force policy makers to take
a comprehensive view of the costs and benefits of public policy
programs. 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 programs
and fixing the parameters of entitlements by laws outside the budget
process. 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 the electorate.
Non-decisions make the controllability of the budget depend on the
qualities of institutions outside the annual budget process, e.g.,
labour market or welfare institutions.
The report proposes that, based on these insights, an analytical
procedure focusing on fiscal developments and their institutional
underpinnings is utilised to evaluate the sustainability of a country's
public finances after a violation of the double standards:
- Does the country shows a sufficient reduction of the deficit,
where sufficient means at least one-half of 1% of GDP?
- Has the country ‘forcefully’ redressed the source of the
deficit problem. ‘Forcefully’ means that the country reversed
the ratio of spending or revenues to GDP by at least two-thirds of
the change it experienced in the years when the deficit emerged.
- Spending and revenues should be disaggregated. It is necessary to
investigate whether the country has reduced the principal elements
of spending or increased the revenue source that led to the rising
deficit.
- Then, at the subsequent stage consider if the country has
identified the institutional weaknesses leading to the excessive
deficit
- Given the necessity to address the problem at the sources, the
report advocates that a country should not be declared having
regained sustainability unless it has passed the third stage.
Applying this procedure provides a broader and more qualitative
approach than the mere focus on aggregate budget numbers than the
Excessive Deficit Procedure or the Stability and Growth Pact. The keys
to sustainability are thus a disaggregate view of the budget and a close
scrutiny of institutions. If sustainability is an important condition
for the success of EMU, then it must be accepted that EMU has a rightful
interest in monitoring fiscal policies of the member states at a deeper
level than just the aggregate deficit, and to demand structural and
institutional adjustments where necessary.
Notes for Editors:
CEPR is a network of over 450 Research Fellows based
throughout Europe, who collaborate through the Centre in research and
its dissemination. CEPR helps its Research Fellows to develop projects,
obtain their funding, administer them and disseminate their results. The
Centre’s research ranges from open economy macroeconomics to trade
policy, from the economic transformation of Central and Eastern Europe
to regionalism in the world economy. The views expressed in the
discussion meeting are the authors’ own. Neither CEPR nor ECARE take
any institutional positions..
Jürgen von Hagen is Professor of Economics at
Universität Bonn, and Director of Zentrum für Europäische
Integrationsforschung (ZEI). He is also a Research Fellow in CEPR’s
International Macroeconomics programme.
‘Sustainability
of Public Finances’
Roberto Perotti, Rolf Strauch and Jürgen von Hagen
ISBN 1 898 128 35 9–– £10.00 / $14.95
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