* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download EPS Session1 2011
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Economic Policy Framework for the 21st Century Professor Dermot McAleese MSc EPS Hilary Term 2011 (S1) 1 OUTLINE The new consensus Why policy adopted Implications of model Will the consensus last? New directions for policy post 2008 2 THE NEW CONSENSUS Competition and the market system Macroeconomic stability Globalisation 3 A Successful Strategy for Growth Requires: openness towards international trade limited government intervention in the economy, and macroeconomic stability IMF, World Economic Outlook, May 1997, p 92 4 COMPETITION AND THE MARKET SYSTEM Pro-competition policies Labour market flexibility Privatisation Deregulation Enterprise-friendly environment 5 IZA Appeal to German Policymakers May 2003 signed by 300 German economists Germany needs to relax the regulations for layoffs, reduce sharply the maximum duration of unemployment benefits, abolish incentives to retire early, increase competition in the health sector to lower the cost of medical coverage, and reduce expenditure so that taxes become less onerous. Nothing less than the future prospects of this nation will depend on the successful outcome of the current reform process. Source: Gary Becker “A Little German Reform would go a long way” BusinessWeek, 1 Dec 20036 India needs more reforms (Economic Survey of India OECD 2007) India’s success over the past two decades is largely the result of market based reforms that gave a greater role to the private sector by reducing the presence of the State in economic affairs Angel Gurria, Sec-General OECD Oct 2007 7 Inward Foreign Direct Investment in India Columbia FDI profiles March 2010 8 9 The OECD on Greece Nov 2009 Increasing labour and product market flexibility will be important to achieve high rates of growth. (P 178) The Economist “Greece’s sovereign-debt crunch” Feb 6 2010 … need for deep reform in Greece. Successful firms overtaxed … Greece’s higher inflation is partly explained by a lack of competition in parts of the economy. As in Italy and Spain, wages are set centrally with too little regard for differences in productivity across industries and companies. 10 MACRO-STABILITY Price stability (independent central bank, ‘hard’ exchange rate) Budget balance Control of government spending FINANCIAL STABILITY 11 Consensus brings low inflation 12 People’s Bank of China The objective of monetary policy is “to maintain the stability of the renminbi and thereby promote economic growth” Art 3 of the Law of the PBC 13 OECD on Portugal -- June 2010 OECD Economic Outlook p. 172 14 The OECD on Greece November 2009 A credible commitment to reducing fiscal imbalances on a sustainable basis is essential for restoring market confidence, creating room for future budgetary manoeuvre and meeting the rising costs of an ageing population. To achieve this, strict control of spending and curbing widespread tax evasion are vital. Longterm fiscal viability also calls for further pension and health care reform. P 278 15 Consensus turns Keynesian (% of GDP) IMF Oct 2009 ch 1 16 GLOBALISATION Free trade Foreign investment Liberalisation of capital Labour mobility 17 WTO Members and Observers August 2009 (August 2009) Members Observers Others 18 Globalisation means …. Open door policies Extending the scope of international trade Emphasis on export promotion Multilateral and regional trade agreements 19 Three pillars are interdependent …. Flexible labour markets are needed if a country is to move workers from import substitution to export industries and benefit from globalisation Globalisation creates pressure on macroeconomic policy to maintain price stability Keeping the economy competitive a key priority for small open economy in 21st century 20 IMPLICATIONS FOR BUSINESS lower taxes weaker trade unions rewards for managers, skilled workers supportive government But …. more competition 21 OECD Economic Outlook May 2007 p. 18 22 IMPLICATIONS FOR WORK ENVIRONMENT labour market flexibility less job security more jobs (many of them temporary, contract) structural adjustment 23 IMPLICATIONS FOR GLOBAL ECONOMY More trade in goods and services More foreign investment and the multinationals More capital mobility and the shifting balance of economic power World Trade Organisation (WTO) more important 24 IMPLICATIONS OF CONSENSUS Business climate lower taxes weaker trade unions rewards for managers, skilled workers less government but, more competition Work environment labour market flexibility less job security more jobs structural adjustment International economy World Trade Organisation (WTO) a key institution foreign investment and multinationals in ascendant capital mobility and the shifting balance of economic power mutuality of benefits 25 Questions for group Q1. Outline the three pillars of the new economic consensus. Show how policy changes along new consensus lines can lead to better economic performance. E1. Outline the contemporary economic policy stance in a country of your choice and indicate how closely it approximates the new policy consensus. Q3. Is the new economic consensus likely to last? Will the present world economic downturn undermine it? 26 Questions for groups Q3. Is the new economic consensus likely to last? Will the present world economic downturn undermine it? • Reading ‘ Economists Rethink Free Trade’ Explain the author’s claim that ‘something momentous is happening’ in the debate about the merits of free trade. How well founded are these doubts? What can be done to reassure people about the advantages of trade? 27 FAULTLINES IN NEW CONSENSUS UNEQUAL INCOME DISTRIBUTION GLOBALISATION AND VULNERABILITY PRIVATE DEBT AND PUBLIC DEBT FINANCIAL INSTABILITY AND REGULATION 28 Faultlines: Income distribution in the US 1949-79 29 Income distribution in the US before tax 1979-2003 Source: Robert Frank “Are Positional Externalities different from Other Externalities?” Happiness and Public Economics Conference, Centre for Economic Performance London 23-24 Sept 2006 30 US Income Distribution after tax 1979-2000 31 Top 1% of households owns around 40% of America’s wealth – the highest proportion since 1929. In the 1970s they accounted for just 20%. (The Economist May 12th 2007 p.75) Top 1% of income earners in the US account for 25% of total US consumption (McKinsey Global Institute, Sept 2009) 32 Faultline 2: Vulnerability ‘The gains from trade liberalization should not only be seen through a narrow economic lens. Trade has also been a vehicle for promoting broader political objectives, especially peace and stability. Trade establishes mutually beneficial links among nations, creating interest in cooperation. It cements relationships among disparate peoples and societies, lessening the risk of conflict, and it strengthens the commitment of governments to rules in the place of realpolitik’ World Trade Organization, Annual Report, 1998 33 Some think that the WTO view is too optimistic ….. ‘ Globalisation’s most fundamental limitation is that , although trade increases the mutual economic dependence of the countries that engage in it, it does not make the peoples of those nations any fonder of each other. Thus, when relations deteriorate because of issues that have nothing to do with commerce, each side starts to resent the dependence on the other, and goodwill can rapidly unravel. James Kinge China Shakes the World: The Rise of a Hungry Nation London 2006 34 Faultline 3: The problem of private sector debt Public (government) debt a problem …. …… but also private debt (Discussed in S4) 35 (% GDP) Public Debt = Central Govt + all govt agencies 36 UK Household Debt as % of Income 1977 80 2008 160 UK: Average Size of Mortgage 1999 2008 £40,000 £160,000 Source V Cable The Storm: The World Economic Crisis and What it means London 2009 37 The New Consensus lives on ….. To improve its [economic] performance, Portugal needs more flexible labour laws, less bureaucracy, a better educated workforce, more competition and a smaller state. As the IMF states in a recent report, Portugal’s problems are domestic, not global, in nature Economist 2 May 2009 p.29 38 WILL THE CONSENSUS LAST? Only as long as it delivers, in terms of faster growth and acceptable income distribution reservations about new consensus policies: Argentina, Venezuela , Iran etc … Convincing outcome requires: correct sequencing of the new policies consistent application of reforms attention to income distribution international cooperation State intervention at macro and micro level an essential complement to private sector 39 Where do we go from here? “The outcome [of the current economic collapse] will be nothing less than a regime change in which the next stage in globalisation and integration is characterised by: More diversified engines of global growth Reduction in global trade and payments imbalances More pronounced inflationary pressures More diversified allocation of investible funds around the world.” Mohamed El-Erian When Markets Collide: Investment strateg9es for the age of Global Economic Change McGraw Hill 2008 40 Pressures on New Consensus Who cares about competition policy? Nationalisation of banks Labour market flexibility -- all that good? Unemployment -------------------------------------------Budget deficits, escalating public debt Deflation Household debt and consumption --------------------------------------------------Protectionism and Competitiveness Competitive devaluations (e.g. Switzerland Mar09) FDI, “Buy our goods” campaigns 41 Stiglitz on the Post-Washington Consensus There are important advantages to the Washington consensus approach to policy advice. It focuses on issues of first-order importance, it sets up an easily reproducible framework and it is frank about limiting itself only to establishing prerequisites for development. but …….. Policies advanced by the Washington consensus are not complete and they are sometimes misguided. Professor Joseph Stiglitz 1998, Nobel prize winner, former Chief Economist The World Bank 42 DMcA (2004) p 10 “Threats to the new consensus have come and gone during the past decade. A succession of financial crises in Mexico, East Asia, Russia, Brazil and Argentina cast doubt on one element in the packages – free capital mobility – as well as underlining the vulnerability of open, competitive economies to changes in ‘market sentiment’. To date most economies have managed to survive these traumas. The advent of a financial crisis occurring at the heart of the Western economy, following a stock market collapse, would be more serious. Were it to be combined with simultaneous problems in the form of oil price increases and a general economic downturn the attractions of globalisation, competition and price stability could easily pall. ….. 43 14th Sep 2007 Northern Rock THINGS FALL APART, THE CENTRE CANNOT HOLD ……. 24th Sep 2008 Bank of East Asia 44 Search for a second-generation policy consensus How to find effective ways to deal with 21st century MEDIUM-TERM problems: Poverty in midst of plenty Nutrition, obesity and health Pensions and ageing Environment and climate change Competitiveness 45