Senior Executive Fellows, February 25, 2014

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Fiscal Policy: Austerity vs. Stimulus Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth Senior Executive Fellows, February 25, 2014

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Fiscal Policy: Austerity vs. Stimulus Jeffrey Frankel Harpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth. Senior Executive Fellows, February 25, 2014. Austerity vs. Stimulus. Definitions Fiscal austerity or contraction : cut government spending or raise taxes, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Senior Executive Fellows, February 25, 2014

Page 1: Senior Executive Fellows, February 25, 2014

Fiscal Policy:Austerity vs. Stimulus

Jeffrey FrankelHarpel Professor of Capital Formation and Growth

Senior Executive Fellows, February 25, 2014

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Definitions• Fiscal austerity or contraction:

– cut government spending or raise taxes,– raising budget surplus (or reducing budget deficit),

• to avoid overheating the economy• & strengthen long-run debt sustainability. (Deficit = Δ debt).

• Fiscal stimulus or expansion:

– Raise government spending or cut taxes– to provide short-term economic stimulus,

• for growth & employment.

Austerity vs. Stimulus

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• “What is the best fiscal policy, Austerity or Stimulus?”

• The question is as foolish as the question, “Should a driver turn left or right?”

• It depends where he is in the road.– Sometimes left is the answer, sometimes right.

Austerity vs. Stimulus, continued

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Cyclicality of Fiscal Policy

• Keynes favored counter-cyclical policy:– fiscal stimulus when under conditions like the 1930s

-- depressed income, high unemployment, low inflation, low interest rates – to moderate the downturn,

– But fiscal contraction during boom periods, to prevent over-heating.

• The boom, not the slump, is the right time for austerity at the Treasury.” - John Maynard Keynes (1937) Collected Writings

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• Keynesian policy (“fine tuning”) fell into disfavor in part because it was hard to get the timing right: • by the time fiscal stimulus became law,

the recession would be over,• e.g., the Kennedy tax cut,

• passed in1964.

• But that is no excuse for pro-cyclical fiscal policy.

• Definition of pro-cyclical fiscal policy: Governments raise spending (or cut taxes) in booms; and are then forced to retrench in downturns, thereby exacerbating upswings & downswings.

Cyclicality of Fiscal Policy, continued

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During the decade after 2000,

• some Emerging Market governments learned how to do counter-cyclical fiscal policy,

• while many Advanced Country politicians forgot,• turning pro-cyclical instead,• exacerbating the business cycle.

Cyclicality of Fiscal Policy, continued

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Since 2008 recession, advanced countries have cut spending, relative to past recoveries;

World Economic Outlook

(WEO) Hopes, Realities, and Risks

IMF, April 2013

EMs have raised spending (having been relatively more conservative before 2008)

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Cyclicality of Fiscal Policy, continued

• Conspicuously, Greece & other euro members failed to reduce budget deficits during years of growth, 2002-08

– and were then forced to cut spending & raise taxes during the euro debt crisis of 2010-12,

• exacerbating their recessions, • & even raising Debt/GDP.

• But the United Kingdom did the same, – despite no euro-constraint forcing austerity in 2010-12.

• And so did the United States !

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Why do leaders fail to take advantage of boom times to strengthen the budget?

• People don’t see the need to “fix the hole in the roof when the sun is shining.”– They do see the mistake

when the storm hits, • but then it is too late.

• Official forecasts are over-optimistic in boom periods, rationalizing the failure to act– according to data from 33 countries.

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Ratio of public debt to GDP among advanced countriesis the highest since the end of WW II

Source: Carlo Cotarelli “Making Goldilocks Happy,” IMF, Apr. 20, 2012

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Source: IMF, 2011.I. Diwan, PED401, Oct. 2011

Greece let its deficit rise during the growth years, 2001-08,despite the 3% of GDP limit set by the Stability & Growth Pact

SGP floor

& then was forced into sharp austerity in 2010-13.

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Many leaders in advanced economies ignored the lessons of past crises.

• They thought debt crises could never happen to them --

• most notably, leaders of euroland,– even after the periphery countries

violated the deficit & debt ceilings of Maastricht and the SGP;

– and even after the Greek crisis hit in late 2009 .

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But Reinhart & Rogoff remind us: sovereign default is an old story, including among advanced countries –

This Time is Different, updated in “From Financial Crash to Debt Crisis,” 2010

Sovereign External Debt: 1800-2009 Percent of Countries in Default or Restructuring

50%-

Note: Sample size includes all countries, out of a total of sixty six, that were independent states in the given year. Sources: Lindert & Morton (1989), Macdonald (2003), Purcell & Kaufman (1993), Reinhart, Rogoff & Savastano (2003), Suter (1992), and Standard & Poor’s (various years).

1980s1930s1870s1830s

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European Debt/GDP ratios have risen more since 2008,

as high interest rates & declining GDP overpower progress on reduction of primary budget deficits.

Via: World Bank, PREM, 2012

14

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As one could have predicted,fiscal contraction is contractionary: fall in GDP is worse

Source: P.Krugman, 10 May 2012, via R.Portes, May 2013.

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• Fiscal rules have been adopted by many countries.

• Do they help?

• Europe’s rules have failed (BD < 3% GDP; Debt < 60% GDP)• Maastricht Criteria & Stability & Growth Pact– Angela Merkel’s Fiscal Compact may be no better.

• Such rules do not work in the US either: – Gramm-Rudman-Hollings in late 1980s– Debt ceiling legislation

– Why?

Budget balance rules are in fashion.

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• “Tough” rules like the SGP or BBA are too rigid. • requiring fiscal contraction when the economy is weak.• They also lack enforceability:

• Every Euro country violated the SGP.

• They worsen the problem of over-optimistic forecasts.– E.g., when euro members go above the 3% deficit ceiling,

• they adjust their forecasts, not their policies.

• Better would be “structural” budget targets (Swiss)

with forecasts from independent experts (Chile).

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Three distinct US fiscal problems

• The long-term debt problem

• The medium-term economic problem

• The short-term political problem

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Three distinct US fiscal problems

• The long-term problem -- debt unsustainability– warrants a path back to fiscal discipline.

• The medium-term economic problem -- slow recovery in aftermath of the 2007-08 financial crisis, – has warranted demand stimulus,

• not contraction,

• which held back growth, 2011-13.

• The short-term problem has been political:– Succession of artificial deadlines, threatening disaster.– Debt ceilings, fiscal cliff, sequester & shutdown.

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Not sustainable

The US does have a long-term debt problem..

Fiscal policy

Source: Concord Coalition, spring 2013 http://www.concordcoalition.org/issues/indicators/projected-debt

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The long-term US debt problem, continued

• “Long-term” in the sense that debt/GDP will rise alarmingly after the 2020s– unless entitlements are put on a sound footing:

• Social Security & Medicare are due to run big deficits– as the baby-boomers retire (predictably)

– and the cost of health care rises rapidly (less predictably).

• Definition of debt sustainability: – regardless the level of the debt, it is sustainable

if the future debt/GDP ratio is forecast to fall indefinitely.

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• There is not a short-term problem:

– Far from tiring of absorbing ever-greater levels of US treasury securities, global investors continue happily to lend at record-low interest rates (2008-13):

• The US enjoys safe-haven status; the $ enjoys “exorbitant privilege.”

– There is no fiscal crisis. The US is not Greece, • though we want to be sure not to become Greece in 20 years.

• Indeed the federal budget deficit is now coming down• from 9 % of GDP in FY 2009 to 4 % in FY 2013.

Long-term debt problem, continued

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The evolution of projected future US Debt/GDP ratios

Phony assumption that Bush tax cuts would disappear after 2010:

Recession +extension of most Bush tax cuts

Sequester & other spending cuts:

Still out there: Coming big deficitsin Social Security & Medicare

Data: Congressional Budget Office.

Source: How Much Room for Improvement in Long-Term Budget Projections? Goldman Sachs Global Macro Research 1/30/2014

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The budget deficit is currently on a declining path.

“The Rapidly Shrinking Federal Deficit” Goldman Sachs Global Economics, Commodities & Strategy Research (Hatzius), Apr.10, 2013

Spending cuts: Recession

+ extension of most Bush tax cuts:

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Debt / GDP is set to decline over 2014 -18.

Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Jan.9, 2013 http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3885

CBPP recommends a further $1.2 tr. in spending cuts & tax rises to stabilize debt out to 2022.But there is no need for it to hit this year. That would send us back into recession.

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The debt problem is also “long-term” in the sense that we have known about it a long time.

"For decades we have piled deficit upon deficit, mortgaging our future and our children's future for the temporary convenience of the present… We must act today in order to preserve tomorrow. And let there be no misunderstanding: We are going to begin to act, beginning today.”

– Inaugural address, Jan. 20, 1981

Long-term debt problem, continued

E.g., when Ronald Reagan, took office:

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The US public discussion is framed as a battle between conservatives who philosophically believe in strong budgets

& small government, and liberals who do not.Democrats, Republicans, & the media all use this language.

• (1) The right goal should be budgets that allow surpluses in booms and deficits in recession.

• (2) The correlation between how loudly an American politician proclaims a belief in fiscal conservatism and how likely he is to take genuine policy steps < 0. [1] Never mind that small government is classically supposed to be the aim of “liberals,” in the 19th century definition, not “conservatives.” My point is different: those who call themselves conservatives in practice tend to adopt policies that are the opposite of fiscal conservatism. I call them “illiberal.” “Republican & Democratic Presidents Have Switched Economic Policies”  Milken Inst.Rev. 2003.

It is not the right way to characterize the debate . [1]

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Brief US fiscal history: The 1980s

• The newly elected Reagan complained of the inherited debt:– “Our national debt is approaching $1 trillion. …

A trillion dollars would be a stack of 1,000-$ bills 67 miles high.”• address to Congress, Feb. 18, 1981.

• Reagan’s actions: sharp tax cuts & rise in defense spending.

• The claim: budget surpluses would result.• The reality: record deficits that added to the national debt

– a 2nd trillion in his 1st term– a 3rd trillion in his 2nd term– a 4th trillion when G.H.W. Bush initially continued the policies.

(“Read my lips, no new taxes.”)

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US fiscal history, continued: The 1990s

• The deficits were gradually cut, and then converted to surpluses by the end of the 1990s.

• How was this accomplished?– Regime of “Shared Sacrifice” -- 3 key policy events.

• 1990: GHW Bush bravely agreed spending caps, taxes & PAYGO

• 1993: Clinton extended the policy.• 1998: As surpluses emerged, “Save Social Security 1st.”

– Strong growth in late 1990s.

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Fiscal history, continued: The 2000s

• The Shared Sacrifice regime ended on the day G.W. Bush took office in Jan. 2001.

• He returned to the Reagan policies:– Large tax cuts

– together with rapid increase in spending (triple Clinton’s)• not just in military spending (esp. Iraq & Afghanistan),

• but also domestic spending: discretionary + Medicare drugs benefit.

• Just like Reagan, he claimed budget surpluses would result.• Just like Reagan, the result was record deficits:

– The national debt doubled.• I.e., GWB incurred more debt than his father + Reagan + 39 predecessors

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Where are we now?

• The political crisis:• repeated partisan standoffs in Congress.

• To reduce the budget deficit:• how far can we get by discretionary spending cuts?

• Where are the right places to squeeze,• politics aside ?

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Repeated partisan stand-offs in Congress

• In the summer of 2011, Congressat first refused the usual debt ceiling increase,– recklessly threatening government default.– Political dysfunction led S&P to downgrade US bonds from AAA.

• “Fiscal cliff” deadline, Jan. 1, 2013.• Sequestration into effect March 1, 2013• Government shutdown, Oct. 1-16, 2013• Debt ceiling, Oct.17, 2013.

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The game of “Chicken”

In the 1955 movie Rebel Without a Cause, whoever jumps out of his car first supposedly “loses” the game.

James Dean does; but the other guy miscalculates and goes over the cliff.

.The Republicans may have miscalculated.

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How far can we get by cutting spending?

• Total federal spending = $3 ½ trillion in round numbers.    

• That spending minus tax revenue left a budget deficit of $1.1 trillion in FY 2012,

• down from $1.4 trillion in 2009.  

• Many Republican congressmen have campaignedto cut only non-defense discretionary spending, – to exempt defense & senior-related spending (Soc. Security & Medicare).– And adamantly no tax increase. 

• How much would we have to trim non-defense discretionary spending to balance the budget?  

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How far can we get by cutting spending? continued

• Start by eliminating PBS funding • =1/10,000 of spending

• Then all foreign aid. • = 1 ½ % of total outlays, not 25% as Americans think. 

• Next, veterans’ benefits.• The same. We are now up to a total of 3 % of outlays.

• Next imagine zeroing out all federal spending on agriculture, science & environment, education & transportation,  

• which includes programs too popular for congressmen to vote for.   

• That is a total of $364 b = 1/3 of the 2012 deficit. 

• Conclusion: Domestic discretionary spending is not where the big bucks are.

• Would would also need to eliminate either all of defense, – or all medicare payments– or all social security payments– while still collecting the social security taxes that are supposed to pay for it!

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Eliminating all non-defense discretionary spending(including also parks, weather service, food safety, SEC, FBI, border patrol,

politicians’ salaries… everything !) 

would not come close to eliminating the budget deficit

Concord Coalition. Data Source: CBO, Jan.2012

$6 b

$30 b

$17 b

$56 b

$35 b

$61 b $59 b

$86 b

$92 b

Total ≈ ½ deficit

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3 biggest spending categories:Health, Social security, & Defense

Medicare & medicaid{

Concord Coalition. Data Source: CBO, Jan. 2012

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Breakdown of federal spending

Concord Coalition. Data Source: CBO, Jan. 2012

Taxrevenue$2.5 tr.

Deficit$1.1 tr.

Budget deficit was $1.1 trillion in FY 2012

Even if one could somehow eliminate all domestic spending, it would not come close to eliminating the deficit

Outlays: $3.5 trillion

Updated: http://cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/2012_09_MBR.pdf

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• 13 years ago, if the country thought it important enough to protect any single category against belt-tightening in the long run -- say military or social security or tax cuts for the rich --

it would have been arithmetically possible, by making the cuts elsewhere.   

• But we no longer have the luxury of such choices — – after the effects of mammoth tax cuts (2001 & 2003),

– two wars (2001, 2003),

– the Medicare prescription drug benefit (2003), – and the severe financial crisis & recession (2008).   

• Starting from our current position, each of the 5 components must play a role, along with taxes.

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• What steps should be taken today to lock in future fiscal consolidation?

– Not by raising taxes or cutting spending today (new recession);

– nor by promising to do so in a year or two (not credible).

– There are lots of economically sensible proposals

• for spending to eliminate over time,

• more efficient taxes to phase in,

• and “tax expenditures” to phase out.

If there were no political constraints…

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How to reduce the budget deficitThe only way to do this is The only way to do this is both both reduce spending reduce spending

& raise tax revenue, as we did in the 1990s.& raise tax revenue, as we did in the 1990s.

• Spending. Spending. Examples:Examples:– Eliminate agricultural subsidies.Eliminate agricultural subsidies.

– Cut manned space program.Cut manned space program.

– Trim National Guard & Reserves, Trim National Guard & Reserves, – Close unwanted military basesClose unwanted military bases– Cut unwanted weapons systems Cut unwanted weapons systems

• A rare success: the F22 Raptor fighter. F-35 Joint Strike Fighter? ($600b/10 yrs.)

• Global Hawk Block 30 drone program? • The C-27J Spartan cargo aircraft? • Upgrades to the M1 Abrams tank• Virginia-class submarine? ($2.6 b)

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How to reduce the budget deficit

The only way is The only way is both both reduce spending & raise tax revenuereduce spending & raise tax revenue, , continued.continued.

• Tax revenue optionsTax revenue options– We could have let G.W. Bush’s We could have let G.W. Bush’s

tax cuts expire in 2013.tax cuts expire in 2013.

– Can still curtail expensiveCan still curtail expensive && distortingdistorting “tax“tax expenditures”expenditures”• E.g., Tax-deductibility of mortgage interest, E.g., Tax-deductibility of mortgage interest, • & of health insurance& of health insurance• Subsidies to oil industry, low tax rate on carried interest, …Subsidies to oil industry, low tax rate on carried interest, …

– Or launch more ambitious tax reform:Or launch more ambitious tax reform:• Introduce a VAT, sales, or consumption taxIntroduce a VAT, sales, or consumption tax• or phase in an energy or carbon taxor phase in an energy or carbon tax

– or auctioning of tradable emission permitsor auctioning of tradable emission permits

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Distortionary subsidies hiding as tax expenditures

Joint Committee of Taxation, Jan. 2012

$128 b

$93 b

$84 b

$305 billion

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The long-term problem is entitlements

Concord Coalition. Data Source: CBO, Jan. 2012

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• Social securitySocial security– Raise retirement age Raise retirement age – just a little,– just a little,

• perhaps exempting low-income workers.perhaps exempting low-income workers.

– IndexIndex benefit growth to chain measure of inflation. benefit growth to chain measure of inflation.

– Further options:Further options:• To please Democrats: Raise the cap on social security taxes.To please Democrats: Raise the cap on social security taxes.• To please Republicans: encourage private accountsTo please Republicans: encourage private accounts

– though they contribute nothing to closing the gap.though they contribute nothing to closing the gap.

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• Health careHealth care– Encourage hospitals to standardize Encourage hospitals to standardize

around best-practice medicine. around best-practice medicine. • Pay health providers for “value,” not per medical procedure.Pay health providers for “value,” not per medical procedure.

• Standardize around best-practice treatment:Standardize around best-practice treatment:– evidence-based evidence-based (to be facilitated by electronic health records).(to be facilitated by electronic health records).

– E.g., pursue the checklist that minimizes patient infections, E.g., pursue the checklist that minimizes patient infections, – and avoid unnecessary medical tests & procedures.and avoid unnecessary medical tests & procedures.– That is not “death panels.”That is not “death panels.”

• Levers to get providers to follow best practices: Levers to get providers to follow best practices: – make Medicare payments conditional make Medicare payments conditional – or offer protection from malpractice litigation.or offer protection from malpractice litigation.

– Curtail corporate tax-deductibility of health insurance.Curtail corporate tax-deductibility of health insurance.

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http://ksghome.harvard.edu/~jfrankel/ Blog: http://content.ksg.harvard.edu/blog/jeff_frankels_weblog/

Writings by Jeffrey Frankel on fiscal policy:

• On Graduation from Fiscal Procyclicality,” 2013, with C.Végh & G.Vuletin,

J. Developmt. Econ. Summary: "Fiscal Policy in Developing Countries: Escape from Procyclicality," VoxEU, 2011. NBER WP 17619.

• "Over-optimism in Forecasts by Official Budget Agencies and Its Implications," Oxford Review of Econ. Policy Vol.27, Issue 4, 2011, 536-62. NBER WP 17239; Summary in NBER Digest, Nov.2011.

• “Snake-Oil Tax Cuts,” 2008, EPI, Briefing Paper 221. HKS RWP 08-056.

• "Responding to Crises," Cato Journal vol.27, no. 2, Spring/Summer, 2007.

• “Republican and Democratic Presidents Have Switched Economic Policies,” Milken Institute Review 5, no. 1, 2003 QI.

Google “Jeffrey Frankel Harvard” for webpage or blog http://content.ksg.harvard.edu/blog/jeff_frankels_weblog/

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Appendices

1: More on the US- a) The long-term fiscal outlook- b) Did the 2009 fiscal stimulus work?- c) Procyclical politicians

2: More on EMs / Developing Countries

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Appendix 1(a): The long-run US fiscal outlookThe budget deficit, though falling now, may resume rising after 2015 if interest rates revert to normal.

US Economics Analyst: 14/07 - Fiscal Policy: Back to “Normal” (Phillips), Global Sachs Global Macro Research 2/14/14

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US Economics Analyst: 14/07 - Fiscal Policy: Back to “Normal” (Phillips), Global Sachs Global Macro Research 2/14/14

The trajectory of health care costshas unexpectedly declined over the last 5 years.

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National debt/GDP is the highest since WWII spike.Source: CBO, March 2012

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Long-term debt problem, continued

Federal

Not sustainable

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Federal debt ratiounder health cost growth assumptions

Source: How Much Room For Improvement in Long-Term Budget Projections? Goldman Sachs Global Macro Research 1/30/2014 Data: Congressional Budget Office.

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1b) Did the fiscal stimulus of 2009 work?

•Obama was sworn in on January 20, 2009.–The economy had been in freefall since the Lehman

Bros. failure Sept. 15: GDP fell 8.3 % p.a. in Q4. –He signed the American Recovery &

Reinvestment Act into law Feb. 17.

•The economic statistics:–The stock market turned around March 9, 2009.–GDP stopped falling. (Recession ended in June.)–The rate of job loss bottomed out in March 2009.

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The stock market turned around immediately

Jan.20,2009

March 9,2009

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GDP stopped falling immediately. (Recession ended in June.)

Jan.20,2009

Level of GDP, monthly (Dec.2006-Dec.2013), estimated by Macroeconomic Advisers

Jan.202009

June,2009

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The rate of job loss turned around quickly

Jan.20,2009March2009

Jan.202009

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Appendix 1c) Some US politicians have

pursued pro-cyclical (i.e., destabilizing) fiscal policy

1st cycle:

• 1980-81: Reagan’s

speeches pledging action to reduce the national debt “beginning today” came during a period of severe recession.

Boom: profligacy.

•1988: As the economy neared the peak of the business cycle, candidate George H.W. Bush was unconcerned about budget deficits:

•“Read my lips, no new taxes.”

Recession: austerity.

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Some US politicians have sought pro-cyclical fiscal policy, continued

2nd cycle

• 1990: The first President Bush summoned the political will to raise taxes & rein in spending (PAYGO) at precisely the wrong moment -- just as the US entered another recession.

Boom: profligacy.

• 1993-2000: Despite the most robust recovery in US history,

– 1993: all Republican congressmen voted against Clinton’s legislation to continue PAYGO etc.

– 2000: Even after 7 years of strong growth, with unemployment < 4%, G. W. Bush campaigned on tax cuts.

• 2003: After his fiscal expansion had turned the inherited surpluses into deficits, GWB went for a 2nd round of tax cuts & continued a spending growth rate > Clinton’s.

– VP Cheney: “Reagan proved that deficits don’t matter.”

Recession: austerity.

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Some US politicians have sought pro-cyclical fiscal policy, continued

3rd cycle

• 2007-09: Predictably, when the new worst recession since the Great Depression hit, Republican congressmen suddenly re-discovered the evil of deficits, deciding that retrenchment was urgent.

– They opposed Obama’s initial fiscal stimulus in February 2009.

• 2011: Subsequently, with a majority in the House, they blocked further efforts by Obama when the stimulus ran out, despite still-high unemployment.

Recession: austerity.

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Thus, through 3 cycles, the efforts at austerity came during recessions,

followed by fiscal expansionwhen the economy was already expanding.

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The US has its own version of biased forecasts

Official US forecasts in the 2000s

• White House forecasts were over-optimistic all along.– OMB in Jan. 2001 forecast rapid rise in tax revenue,

• in effect assuming there would never be a recession.

– Four tricks to justify tax cuts, dating from the 1980s:

• The Magic Asterisk• Rosy Scenario• Laffer Hypothesis• Starve the Beast Hypothesis

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The US version of biased forecasts, continued

Official US forecasts in the 2000s

• Congressional Budget Office forecasts are honest.

– But the Bush Administration adopted new tricks,

– so that “current-law budget” would show future surpluses:• continuation of Iraq & Afghan wars treated as a surprise each year;• phony sun-setting of tax cuts…

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Appendix 2: EM / Developing Countries

Most experience with sovereign debt problems during our lifetimes arose in developing countries

• Recycling of petrodollars after 1974 -– ended in the international debt crisis of 1982

• and the Lost Decade of growth in Latin America.

• Emerging market inflows in the 1990s– ended in currency crashes:

• Mexico (1994),

• East Asia, Russia (1997-98)

• Turkey, Argentina (2001)…

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Emerging Market (EM) countries learned from the crises of the 1980s & 1990s.

• Some EMs took advantage of the 2002-07 expansion to strengthen their budgets.

• They achieved:– Lower debt levels than advanced economies;– improved credit ratings;– lower sovereign spreads; and

– less pro-cyclical fiscal policies.

• Historically, policy in developing countries was pro-cyclical.• E.g., the correlation between spending & GDP was positive.

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Correlations between Gov.t Spending & GDP1960-1999

procyclic

al }

G always used to be pro-cyclical for most developing countries.

countercyclic

al

Adapted from Kaminsky, Reinhart & Vegh (2004)

Pro-cyclical spending

Counter-cyclical spending

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Correlations between Government spending & GDP 2000-2009

In the last decade, about 1/3 developing countries

switched to countercyclical fiscal policy:Negative correlation of G & GDP.

Frankel, Vegh & Vuletin (2012)

procyclic

al

countercyclic

al

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The historic role reversal

• Over the last decade some emerging market countries finally developed countercyclical fiscal policies:

• They took advantage of the boom years 2003-2007 – to run primary budget surpluses and cumulate reserves.

– And so were able to respond to global recession of 2008-09 .– E.g., Botswana, Chile, China, Korea, & Malaysia.

• Debt levels among rich countries (debt/GDP ratios > 90%) have reached triple those of emerging markets.

• Some emerging markets have earned credit ratings higher than some so-called advanced countries.

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Country creditworthiness is now inter-shuffled

“Advanced” countries (Formerly) “Developing” countriesAAA Germany, UK Singapore, Hong KongAA+ US, FranceAA Belgium ChileAA- Japan ChinaA+ KoreaA MalaysiaA- Thailand, BotswanaBBB+ Ireland, Italy, Spain BBB- Iceland ColombiaBB+ PhilippinesBB Portugal Costa Rica, JordanB Burkina FasoSD Greece

S&P ratings, Feb.2012 updated 8/2012

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But weaker in advanced economies.

World Economic Outlook, IMF, April 2012

Public finances after 2001became stronger in EMs