A Strategy for Growth in the EU How to Boost the Economic Recovery?

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A Strategy for Growth in the EU How to Boost the Economic Recovery? EU Commission and Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Berlin, November 19, 01 Lorenzo Codogno Director General, Italian Ministry of Economy and Finance

THE CURRENT ECONOMIC POLICY SCENARIO Have policies worked out six years into the crisis? Weakness in investment activity. Steady decline in potential growth almost everywhere. High unemployment, especially among the youth (but DE). Need to absorb macroeconomic imbalances in some MSs. Increased poverty and reversal of progress towards social inclusion processes, with potential political risks (all EA). Continuing disinflation (and risks of de-anchoring expectations and triggering deflation). Euro not weakening enough and rising EA current account surpluses.

THE CURRENT ECONOMIC POLICY SCENARIO Where do we get growth from? Supply-side reforms: what can be done to strengthen them? How can we provide incentives for reforms within the existing fiscal framework? Lack of aggregate demand: Is the current policy mix a correct stance for the Euro Area? Are European fiscal rules appropriate for the current economic environment? Can we overcome the moral hazard issue? 3

% of GDP MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Additional fiscal consolidation is unavoidable 0 - - -6-8 -10-1 Eurozone Periphery France Spain Core Germany Italy United States -1 1995 1997 1999 001 003 005 007 009 011 013 015 Note: Core Euro area includes Austria, Benelux, Germany, Finland and France. Periphery Euro area includes Greece, Ireland, Italy, Spain and Portugal. Deficit data for Greece are not available for the period 1995-1999. Source: Eurostat, US Department of the Treasury, Bureau of Economic Analysis, European Commission (forecasts)

% of GDP MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Public debt deleveraging has yet to start 10 10 Eurozone Core Periphery Germany France Italy Spain United States 100 80 60 0 0 1995 1997 1999 001 003 005 007 009 011 013 015 Note: Core Euro area includes Austria, Benelux, Germany, Finland and France. Periphery Euro area includes Greece, Ireland, Italy, Spain and Portugal. Source: Eurostat, US Department of the Treasury, Bureau of Economic Analysis, European Commission (forecasts) 5

% year-on-year % year-on-year MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Is GDP growth going back to its pre-crisis potential? 6 6 0 0 Eurozone France - Spain Italy - - Germany Core - -6 Periphery United States 1995 1997 1999 001 003 005 007 009 011 013 015 Source: Eurostat, BEA, European Commission (forecasts) -6 6

Index 008=100 Index 008=100 MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Are GDP level losses going to be recovered? 10 10 110 110 100 100 90 90 80 Germany France Spain 80 70 60 Italy Eurozone Core Periphery United States 1995 1997 1999 001 003 005 007 009 011 013 015 70 60 Source: Eurostat, BEA, European Commission (forecasts) 7

% year-on-year % year-on-year MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Domestic demand improving slowly even in core EA countries 8 8 6 6 0 0 - - -6-8 Eurozone France Spain Italy Core Periphery Germany United States 1996 1998 000 00 00 006 008 010 01 01 016 Source: Eurostat,Oxford Economics, European Commission (forecasts) - - -6-8 8

% of GDP % of GDP MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Investments for growth: the challenge to reverse current trends 35 3 1 0 19 18 17 16 Germany France Italy Eurozone Spain (RHS) 15 1995 1997 1999 001 003 005 007 009 011 013 015 Source: Eurostat, European Commission (forecasts) 33 31 9 7 5 3 1 19 17 15 9

% of GDP MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Policy mix leading to current account surpluses 10 8 6 Germany France Italy Spain United States 0 - - -6-8 -10-1 1995 1997 1999 001 003 005 007 009 011 013 015 Note: Euro area data are not available in the period 1995-1998. Source: Eurostat, ECB, IMF, European Commission (forecasts) 10

% year-on-year % year-on-year MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Contraction in credit: still no turning point 3 8 0 Euro Area Spain Italy Germany France 3 8 0 16 1 8 0 - -8-1 16 1 8 0 - -8-1 -16-16 Jul-06 Jul-07 Jul-08 Jul-09 Jul-10 Jul-11 Jul-1 Jul-13 Jul-1 Source: ECB Italy s Strategy for Reforms, Fiscal Sustainability and Economic Growth 11

% % MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Cost of credit: the gap among EA countries remains wide 6 6 5 5 3 3 Germany Spain Italy Euro area France 1 1 giu-06 giu-07 giu-08 giu-09 giu-10 giu-11 giu-1 giu-13 giu-1 Source: ECB Italy s Strategy for Reforms, Fiscal Sustainability and Economic Growth 1

% year-on-year % year-on-year MACROECONOMIC TRENDS Disinflation continues (with non-negligible risk of deflation) 6 5 HIPC - All Items 6 5 3 1 0 3 1 0-1 Germany France Italy Spain -1 Core Periphery Eurozone - - set-07 set-08 set-09 set-10 set-11 set-1 set-13 set-1 Source: ECB 13

PROPER FISCAL CONSOLIDATION PACE AND INCENTIVES FOR GROWTH Does it make sense to allow flexibility for structural reforms? Structural reforms increase potential growth over the mediumlong run and thus lower the structural part of the deficit. Structural reforms often imply either near-term recessionary effects or need to compensate losers with a negative impact on public accounts. What really matters is long-term sustainability of debt: supporting reforms makes sense also from a fiscal point of view. Risk of providing the wrong incentives: if you do fiscal consolidation you are fine, if you do structural reforms you are punished. 1

PROPER FISCAL CONSOLIDATION PACE AND INCENTIVES FOR GROWTH IMF Art.IV EA: The SGP may reduce incentives for growth The SGP may reduce incentives to foster long-term growth: Two issues features prominently in current discussions. The first is that the SGP may limit the space to finance structural reforms that entail sizeable short-term budgetary costs. Although the 005 reform explicitly recognized that these costs should be accompanied, the present framework has so far only been applied to some types of pension reforms. Going beyond pension reforms is proving contentious. A second question is whether the MTO and, to a lesser extent, the 3 percent deficit cap, discourages public investment by limiting the capacity to borrow to fund projects that increase long-term growth potential. 15

PROPER FISCAL CONSOLIDATION PACE AND INCENTIVES FOR GROWTH How to measure structural reforms? Already a large body of economic literature. Methods to assess how much reforms add to economic growth over time. Work of the LIME WG attached top EPC and plenty of papers by the Commission. Uncertainty is admittedly high, but it is feasible to come up with reasonable ranges. Surveillance of structural reforms is already sufficiently delevoped and deep enough to allow an evidence-based decision on flexibility for reforms. 16

PROPER FISCAL CONSOLIDATION PACE AND INCENTIVES FOR GROWTH Finance and investment for growth? Juncker s plan to be announced soon. Very important for the long-term prospects of the EU economy. What can be done by the private sector and what instead can only be done by governments (or a supranational institution)? Unlikely to provide strong support to the economy over the near term, but could give a boost to confidence and thus support the recovery. Focus on the quality of public investment. 17

PROPER FISCAL CONSOLIDATION PACE AND INCENTIVES FOR GROWTH What s the way out? Need for more integrated common and country-specific structural policies to support long-term growth, employment and social cohesion. EU Member States are engaged in fiscal consolidation and efforts to reduce macroeconomic imbalances, which inevitably have near-term negative effects on demand: need for fine-tuning and flexibility linked to structural reforms. The transmission mechanism of monetary policy is still not working properly. Need for inflation moving back to target soon. 18

ITALY S REFORM AGENDA Best policy for an indebted country in a severe recession? Many targets: balancing public finance objectives, supporting the economy, respecting fiscal rules and maintaining credibility in financial markets. But one priority: structural reforms to boost confidence and change expectations of economic agents and investors. Unfortunately, structural reforms take time to bear fruits. The ultimate goal must be sustainable economic growth and prosperity. 19

ITALY S REFORM AGENDA Italy s key reforms, completed or under way Institutional reforms: new electoral law, end to bicameralism, simplification of the multilayer governance. Labour market reform: further flexibility in hiring, labour law reshuffling and simplification, Youth Guarantee. Tax system: reduction in the tax wedge, a more equitable, transparent, simplified and growth-oriented tax system. Speeding up of payments of the public administration: new regulatory and monitoring framework, electronic invoicing. Italy s Strategy for Reforms, Fiscal Sustainability and Economic Growth 0

ITALY S REFORM AGENDA Italy s key reforms, completed or under way Privatisation programme: State-owned/local gov t companies and real estate assets to improve efficiency and reduce debt. Spending review: reducing procurement costs, increasing efficiency and cutting unproductive public spending. Investment framework: alternative financing especially for SMEs, incentives for large-scale infrastructure investment; extra budget leeway for public investment at local level. Public administration: digitalisation and modernisation, open data, transparency, red tape reduction, fight against corruption. Italy s Strategy for Reforms, Fiscal Sustainability and Economic Growth 1