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Ec426 Public Economics 2 Can welfare states compete in a global economy? 1 1 Plan of lecture 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Globalisation as threat to the welfare state Impact of globalisation on non-welfare state (“US”) Impact of globalisation on welfare state (“Europe”) A richer model Importance of institutional structure: unemployment benefits 2 2 1. Globalisation as threat to welfare state “The panoply of social programs, benefits and protections designed to cushion Europeans from the harshest effects of their capitalist economies have become enormously expensive and, in some cases, their consequences extremely perverse” (Newsweek, 20 December 1993). Argument A: Tax Cost Two different arguments That welfare state has too high a tax cost. Argument B: Specific effect That welfare state benefits have negative effects on economic performance. 3 3 Tax cost argument Tax as % GDP = Replacement rate x dependency rate + Other government spending/GDP + Cost of tax expenditures/GDP + Cost of debt interest/GDP 4 Specific cost argument Globalisation (G) Economic performance (EP) Welfare state (WS) ∂EP/∂G < 0 and ∂2EP/∂G∂WS < 0 Need to examine economic impact of globalisation, first in absence of WS. 5 2. Impact of globalisation on non-welfare state (“US”) Open economy: Assume goods and services traded (with zero transport costs), but that factors immobile. Immobility reasonable first assumption for labour, on which focus to begin with, as literature has highlighted labour market and the differential impact on skilled and unskilled workers. Cause of increased wage dispersion in US. 6 6 Re-label GE two factor model: X/Y skilled and unskilled labour Domestic demand Assume small country: facing given world relative price for output Trade: import of X, export of Y Production wS/wU pX = cX(wS,wU); pY = cY(wS,wU) Pricing Eg Cobb-Douglas case pX= wU wS α (1-α) ; pY = wUβwS(1-β) pX / pY = [wS/wU]β-α X is intensive in use of unskilled labour if α > β pX/pY wS/wU Assume X more intensive in unskilled 7 labour Effect of increased competition in production of X by NIC X/Y Effect of globalisation Skilled wage premium rises and trade increases pX/pY wS/wU Pricing wS/wU 8 Different where specialisation. X/Y Effect of globalisation Cobb-Douglas case wS/wU wS/wU = [(1-β)/β /LS/LU] unaffected by global competition ■ ● ■ ● ● wS/wU “Supply” curve pX/pY Pricing where both goods produced 9 Country faces offer curve Export X X/Y Domestic demand Domestic + Foreign demand Trade in balance wS/wU Import X pX/pY Pricing wS/wU 10 Effect of globalisation where country faces offer curve X/Y Effect of globalisation on final demand (domestic + foreign) Skilled wage premium rises and pX/pY falls wS/wU pX/pY Pricing wS/wU 11 Implications for personal income distribution It is not just a matter of ws/wu. The personal distribution depends on the numbers of skilled and unskilled workers. There are LS with wage wS, LU with wage wU. Denote ratio wS/wU by ω, and ratio LS/LU by ℓ. Then total income is wU (ωLS+LU) and share of unskilled is 1/[1+ωℓ]. Gini coefficient is equal to the difference between population share and income share, which is [ω-1]ℓ/[(1+ℓ)(1+ωℓ)] Depends on ω but also on ℓ. “Trade” explanation of increased earnings dispersion. Lorenz curve 12 3. Impact of globalisation on welfare state (“Europe”) Krugman (1994 and Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, issue 1, 1995) argued that Europe differently affected by globalisation on account of welfare state. Welfare state here represented by unemployment benefit at rate b (in real terms), financed by a payroll tax levied on workers at rate tS or tU, so that the net wage becomes w(1t). BUT First have to ask: why is there unemployment? 13 13 Unemployment benefit and reservation wage In the textbook Krugman model, the only cause of unemployment is that unemployment benefit causes there to be a reservation wage that is (1+η) times the benefit level. In particular, (1-t)wU ≥ (1+η)b π where π is an index of consumer prices. If we assume that demands are Cobb-Douglas, with all income (and all government revenue) being spent a fraction μ on good X and a fraction (1-μ) on good Y, then price index π = pXμ pY(1-μ) With Cobb-Douglas cost functions (see slide 7), and ω = wS/wU pX = wU ω(1-α); pY = wU ω(1-β) Hence π = wU ωζ where ζ= μ(1-α)+(1-μ)(1-β) The ceiling on the skilled wage premium therefore becomes (1-tU)wU ≥ (1+η)b wU ωζ or ω ≤ [(1-tU)/(b(1+η))]1/ζ = ω*. 14 Higher unemployment X/Y Effect of globalisation Effect of wage premium ceiling Supply where full employment wS/wU ● ● pX/pY ω = ω* = [(1-tU)/(b(1+η))]1/ζ Wage premium ceiling Cobb-Douglas case ● wS/wU 15 X/Y ● ● Unemployment rises U/LU Effect of globalisation ● ● Determination of unemployment rate Unemployment Determined rate of by ω* unskilled workers How to cut unemployment in this model? pX/pY • allow ω* to rise by cutting b • allow ω* to rise by cutting tU • raise LS/LU 16 Implications Globalisation causes increased wage dispersion in US but unemployment in Europe.The distributional consequences need to be analysed with care. In the “European” case there are LS with wages (1-tS)wS ,(LU –U) with wages (1-tU)wU, and U with benefit income b. Need to distinguish between: • distribution of earnings • distribution of market income • distribution of disposable income Earnings: mean rises, causing both slopes to fall, and proportion of unskilled workers falls. Lorenz curve What happens to the distribution of market income and disposable income? Effect of globalisation in “European” case 17 BUT • (1) Underlying model is Arrow-Debreu (perfect competition and fully clearing markets), with no unemployment in absence of unemployment benefit; • (2) Economic model is inconsistent and omits key features (Section 4); • (3) Treatment of unemployment benefit ignores important institutional aspects (Section 5). 18 4. A richer model • Inconsistent: Do not have parallel universes; Europe and US are trading in same world, so cannot have both pX/pY fall (and increased wage dispersion in US) and pX/pY constant (and European unemployment); need as a minimum 3 country model (US, Europe and NIC); • Need to relax tight link between product prices and factor prices; introduce non-traded sector (e.g. personal services, sector Z). • Model lacks capital and intermediate goods • 2 country x 2 good x 2 factor model not adequate. 19 A richer 3 country (Europe, US and NIC) x 3 sector (intermediate good, final output, and personal services) x 3 factor (skilled labour, unskilled labour and capital) model Capital Labour Sector X (intermediate good) Sector Y (final good) Sector Z (non-traded personal services) Input Intermediate good (X) Unskilled labour Output Skilled labour Input Unskilled labour A B Atkinson, “The economics of the welfare state in today’s world”, International Tax and Public Finance, 2008, vol 15: 5-17. 20 Main conclusions from richer model • In this model, wS/wU may be fixed in Europe, but not determine wage ratio in US; • Globalisation can lead to unemployment of unskilled workers in Europe but increased wage dispersion in US; • Effect of globalisation is moderated in both cases by expansion of service sector employment; • Globalisation may cause de-localisation of capital from X sector in Europe to either NIC or US; • Welfare state is less exposed the higher the LS/LU ratio; investing in skills is advantageous. 21 21 5. Importance of institutional structure The standard treatment by economists assumes that unemployment benefit is paid unconditionally to all those unemployed. Such a treatment ignores important institutional features. Hypothetical Typical real-world UI (unemployment insurance) Typical real-world UA (unemployment assistance) Benefit paid irrespective of reasons for entering unemployment. Benefit refused where a person enters unemployment voluntarily or as a result of industrial misconduct. As UI. Benefit is paid for all days of an unemployment spell. Benefit may not be paid for an initial period. As UI. Benefit is unlimited in duration. Limited duration and rate of benefit may decline over time. As hypothetical. No condition of job search is imposed. Benefit conditional on being available for work and engaging in job search. As UI. There is no penalty for refusal of job offers. Refusal of job offers may lead to disqualification from benefit. As UI. There are no contribution or income conditions. Benefit depends on satisfaction of contribution conditions. Amount of UA depends on other income and on assets via a means test. Eligibility for benefit is not affected by income of other family members. As hypothetical. Amount of UA is affected by income and assets of other 22 household members. 22 Implications of institutional structure • Some of the unemployed may not receive benefits: in 2005 in the EU 40 per cent of those unemployed 1-3 months did not receive any benefit (UI, UA or sickness benefits), 29 per cent of those unemployed for 4-6 months, and 42 per cent of those unemployed for 7-12 months. • Benefit conditions need to be taken into account in economic models: for example, job search models of unemployment assume that a person can reject job offers without any risk of losing benefit, whereas they may be disqualified; • The “shirking” model of efficiency wages assumes that a person dismissed for shirking would receive benefit, whereas they may well be disqualified; • Contribution conditions mean that new entrants cannot receive UI; • Contribution conditions mean that there is a link between payroll taxes paid and benefits received. 23 Conclusions • Distinguish two concerns: (a) tax cost of welfare state and (b) its impact on working of the economy; • In absence of unemployment benefit, globalisation can lead to widening wage dispersion, but not where economy specialised; • Unemployment benefit leads to restricted wage flexibility, and hence unemployment, intensified by globalisation; • But we need a model where there is rationale for unemployment benefit (e.g. search model); • Analysis needs to be extended to allow for 3 countries (and 3 goods and 3 factors); • The standard treatment of unemployment benefit by economists assumes that it is paid unconditionally to all those unemployed. Such a treatment ignores important institutional features. 24 24