By Shawn Tully
France, Italy, Spain, Ireland, Greece and Portugal
have already proven that more government spending actually slows growth. Why do
they want to spend even more?
The leaders of distressed European nations, from
Italy's Mario Monti to France's Francois Hollande, are blaming
"austerity" for their economic woes, and championing policies that
promote "growth."
It's important to define the two terms.
Austerity stands for shrinking budget deficits, by lowering spending, raising
taxes, or a combination of the two. The pro-growth measures are what's known in
the U.S. as "stimulus." It comprises short-term fiscal policies
designed to limit the damage from a recession and speed recovery. Stimulus
works in precisely the opposite direction of austerity by raising budget
deficits, supposedly as an emergency measure. Today, southern Europe's
heads-of-government, applauded by the Obama administration, advocate recharging
their flagging economies by swelling the gap between revenues and expenses,
chiefly by lifting government outlays.
This blueprint for revival has two glaring flaws. First, the ailing nations, except in rare instances, haven't even attempted the deficit-slashing "austerity" that's supposedly causing their decline. Second, these countries have been deploying enormous deficits since the recession began in late 2008, and yet this constant "stimulus" has done absolutely nothing to cushion the recession or hasten a recovery. Their principal legacy is saddling the weaker nations with unsustainable levels of debt, a situation that would become far worse if Europe heeds the current calls for more spending and deficits.
Τo gauge where these policies went wrong, we'll examine the performance of what we'll call Europe's "Six Spenders:" France, Italy, Spain, Ireland, Greece, and Portugal. To simplify, we'll treat the Six Spenders as if they were one big country by combining their deficit, spending, debt, GDP growth and other numbers.
The big push for stimulus began in 2009.
From the end of 2008 to 2011, the Six Spenders had combined budget deficits of
almost $1.4 trillion (we'll translate all euro numbers into dollars). That's
approximately $450 billion a year, or an enormous 7.3% of GDP. So how much
growth did all that "stimulus" create? Over those three years, the
Six Spenders' combined output shrank by 5%, adjusted for inflation.
Public sector spending stayed steady in
real terms, even though tax revenues fell sharply -- hence the big jump in
deficits. So why did the economies overall perform so poorly? GDP has four
components: government expenditures, consumer spending, private or business
investment, and the surplus of exports over imports, or vice versa. The
rationale sustaining government spending in a recession is that it sustains not
just that category, but also boosts the other three, so that the economy
expands far faster, or shrinks a lot less, than it would without the stimulus.
For example, hiring more public transit workers and raising unemployment
payments would lift "aggregate demand" as consumers spend their
government paychecks and federal benefits on restaurants, cell phones, and
condos.
It didn't happen. While governments held
their spending at already elevated levels, the private sector shrank
drastically, explaining that fall in total output. From 2008 to 2011, the sum
of private investment, net exports and consumer spending dropped almost 10% in
inflation-adjusted euros. That fall of $140 billion is almost exactly the same
as the increase in combined deficits over the same three years. It's hard to
avoid the conclusion that stimulus designed to boost growth simply moves the
same money around, with no immediate effect on growth.
Here's why stimulus doesn't work. The
extra money needed to support ever-increasing deficits must be borrowed. A
large portion of those borrowings flow from the nations' citizens. Instead of
buying newly issued stocks or bonds, or placing cash in savings accounts where
the euros are loaned to businesses, Italians or Greeks purchase government
securities. Money that used to flow to private investment is now going to the
government. Rather than being spent on robots, computers and other capital
equipment, it's now channeled to newly-hired government workers, who spend it
on cars or vacations, or to more generous unemployment benefits.
In the short-term, whether the euros go
to private investment or government spending has a minimal effect on growth.
Once again, it's the same money just changing categories. But over several years,
shifting productivity-enhancing investment to government spending slows growth.
In fact, the Six Spenders' poor
performance in the recession is an outgrowth of the heavy spending policies
they pursued in the preceding years. From 2004 to 2008, the governments used
the tax windfall from a boom in consumption and real estate bubbles, both
courtesy of low, German-style interest rates, to substantially raise government
spending as a share of the economy. At the same time, the private sector
shrank, going from 62% of GDP to 58.5% in Spain, 54.7% to 52.5% in Greece,
52.5% to 51.3% in Italy, and 66% to 57.2% in Ireland. (Those numbers are now
even lower because of the recession.)
How about the argument that growth would
have been even worse without the support of big deficits? And how do we know
that the shrinking private sector is what made these nations so vulnerable, and
perform so badly, in the recession? Fortunately, the Eurozone provides the
equivalent of a "control group," for this experiment. It's the largest
Eurozone economy, Germany. From 2008 to 2011, Germany did relatively little
deficit spending, and thus deployed minimal stimulus. Yet it managed to
actually increase GDP by 1% in total over that three-year period, versus a 5%
drop for the Six Spenders.
Once again, it was the growth of the
private sector in the years before the recession that explains Germany's
resilience. From 2004 to 2008, the private economy expanded from 53% to 56% of
GDP, and government spending was highly restrained. That freed more money for
companies to invest in plants and research facilities, creating a dynamism that
served Germany well in the recession, while the Six Spenders were channeling
more resources to the government.
It's important to realize that, in
theory, Keynesian "stimulus" only works if the deficit this year is
bigger than the one last year. Keeping a huge deficit constant, or shrinking it
slightly, will not provide the jolt the growth crowd wants. Hence, spending by
the Six Spenders for 2012 would have to far exceed the combined $370 billion
shortfall for 2011.
But the string of big deficits has
already saddled those countries with heavy debt. Their average debt-to-GDP
ratio is now 93%, versus 65% in 2004. Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Greece are
all at 108% or more. A $500 billion deficit in 2012 would inflate that ratio by
more than eight more percentage points.
It's difficult to understand how the heads-of-government
think that their nations can actually run even bigger deficits that will pile
on even more debt. The markets are already turning
against them -- witness the gigantic spread between rates on German and Spanish
government bonds, with the latter approaching a disastrous 7%.
"The markets will not allow these
countries to continue borrowing on this scale," says Uri Dadush, an
economist at the Carnegie Endowment. "Deficit reduction is an essential
element to getting them to grow again. The size of their government sectors is
proving unsustainable."
It's become a widely accepted cliché
that "stimulus" and big deficits equal growth. That's
an illusion supporting policies that are pure delusion.
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