What drives the German current account? And how does it affect the other Euro Area member states?

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What drives the German current account? And how does it affect the other Euro Area member states? Robert Kollmann (ECARES, Université Libre de Bruxelles & CEPR) Marco Ratto (JRC, European Commission) Werner Roeger (DG ECFIN, European Commission) Jan in't Veld (DG ECFIN, European Commission) Lukas Vogel (DG ECFIN, European Commission) The views in the presentation are personal and should not be attributed to the European Commission. 1

GERMAN (DE) current account since re-unification Spectacular increase of CA surplus after launch of Euro (1999) slightly negative 1991-2000 (-1% GDP) strong rise 2002-2007 (+7.5% of GDP) stable 2008-12 (5%-6% of GDP) in same league as CAs of Japan & China massive accumulation of Net Foreign Assets (40% of GDP in 2012) 2

1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 8 6 4 2 0-2 -4 Current account (% of GDP) 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 NFA position (% of GDP) 3

4

Policy debate: Role of intra-ea external imbalances Role of surplus countries in external adjustment Theory suggests CA reflects domestic and foreign macroeconomic & financial shocks and structure of the domestic and foreign economies Positive and normative evaluation of the CA: need reliable quantitative DSGE model for understanding of drivers & transmission mechanisms 5

Contribution of paper: Develops and estimates 3-country DSGE model: Germany (DE), Rest of Euro Area (REA), Rest of the World (ROW) Housing market Government (distorting taxes) Nominal rigidities, financial frictions Demand & supply shocks in goods, labor, asset markets 6

Literature Analyses of CA in 2-country DSGE models Yi (1993), Kollmann (1998), Erceg et al. (2006). Calibrated (not estimated), no financial frictions, no housing Jacob & Peersman (2013): estimated 2-country DSGE model of US CA: no financial frictions, no housing 7

Results: German CA surplus driven by succession of shocks: 1) Increase in financial integration among EMU members convergence of interest rates: Rest of Euro Area interest rates DE interest rate Investment in DE ; Invest in Rest of EA 2) Labor market reforms & wage restraint in DE DE competitiveness 3) Growth in emerging economies: DE exports 8

Shocks that drove the rise in German CA had a positive effect on GDP in Rest of Euro Area Key shock transitory (or have transitory effect on CA): DE CA not likely to remain high DE CA surplus is not structural 9

Facts CA = trade balance + net transfers & income Close link between CA and TB dynamics 10

CA = S I S/Y: falls until 2003, then I/Y: trend 11

12

Fall in I/Y: common to different sectors 13

Net Exports: NX=Y-C-G-I NX/Y=(Y-C-G)/Y I/Y 14

Mean 1991-2000 Mean 2002-2012 mean 2002-2012 & Difference between mean 1991-2000 CA/Y - 1.1 5.3 6.4 NX/Y 0.5 5.3 4.8 (Net transfers & income)/y - 1.6-0.1 1.5 National S/Y 21.2 23.2 1.9 Household S/Y 11.5 11.4-0.1 Corporation S/Y 9.1 11.4 2.4 Government S/Y 0.7 0.4-0.4 National I/Y 22.3 17.9-4.4 Household I/Y 8.2 6.0-2.2 Corporation I/Y 11.9 10.3-1.6 Government I/Y 2.2 1.6-0.7 C/Y 57.9 57.8-0.2 Housing I/Y 7.2 5.4-1.8 Non-housing I/Y 15.1 12.5-2.6 G/Y 19.3 19.0-0.2 15

Decadal rise in CA/Y due to fall in I/Y S/I matters for high frequency CA/Y fluctuations STD of HP filtered variables: S/Y I/Y CA/Y Corr(S/Y,CA/Y) Corr(I/Y,CA/Y) 1.32 0.99 1.30 0.71-0.31 16

01/03/1991 01/04/1992 01/05/1993 01/06/1994 01/07/1995 01/08/1996 01/09/1997 01/10/1998 01/11/1999 01/12/2000 01/01/2002 01/02/2003 01/03/2004 01/04/2005 01/05/2006 01/06/2007 01/07/2008 01/08/2009 01/09/2010 01/10/2011 01/11/2012 % of EA-17 GDP 3 2 Trade balances 1 0-1 -2 DE_TB RoEA_TB RoW_TB -3-4 NX as % of EA-17 GDP 17

18

The Model QUEST III: standard state-of-the-art open-economy DSGE model (Ratto et al. 2009) Estimation period: 1995q1-2012q4 3 regions (DE, REA, ROW) 19

DE block Patient HH Impatient HH who face collateral constraint c c H c ( 1 rt ) Bt t pt Ht 1 Kiyotaki & Moore (1997), Iacoviello (2005) 20

International financial market integration Interest parity conditions with time-varying risk premia (ρ) linking DE, REA and ROW one-period nominal interest rates: i i E ln e DE REA DE, REA DE, REA t t t t 1 t i i E ln e EA ROW EA, ROW EA, ROW t t t t 1 t i s i (1 s ) i After 1999: EA DE DE DE REA t t t ln e s ln e (1 s ) ln e EA, DE DE, DE REA, t 1 t 1 t 1 ln e ln e ln e EA, DE, REA, t 1 t 1 t 1 Empirical measure of is US federal funds rate, and EXR to ROW is EXR to USD. and are exogenous AR(1) processes. Monetary policy in EMU: Taylor rule 21

Results Here, focus on 3 shocks that affected Germany during the estimation period: Convergence of interest rates in EMU Labour market ( Hartz ) reforms (reduction in benefit replacement rate) High foreign demand (increasing demand in REA and ROW) 22

Convergence of DE & REA interest rates (Increase in DE vs. Rest of EA risk premium) Rest of Euro Area GDP (%) 23

Higher benefit replacement rate (reform: benefit reduction!) Rest of Euro Area GDP (%) 24

Increasing foreign demand Rest of Euro Area GDP (%) 25

Historical Decomposition: German Net Exports, as % of GDP Data Labor mkt reform Interest rate convergence External Demand 26

Trade balance (increase) 2001-2004: 1) Narrowing of interest rate gap within EA and Euro Depreciation 2) Wage restraint in Germany starting around 2000 3) Negative shock to Investment (firm financing conditions) 4) Negative shock to household financing conditions Trade balance (remains high)2004-2008: 1) Rising world demand (increases TB) 3) From 2005: Hartz reform (increases TB via a rise in savings) Offset by: 2) Euro appreciation (reduces TB) 3) Firm financing conditions improve (reduces TB) 27

Trade balance (remains high) 2009-2012: 1) Wage restraint (increases TB) 2) Euro depreciates (Euro crisis) (increases TB) 3) Household and firm financing conditions Offset by: 1) Declining German interest rates 2) Persistent negative TFP shock (declining savings via declining GDP) 28

Conclusions Increase of the German trade balance 2000-2003 cannot be attributed to a single shock. The persistently high German trade balance can be interpreted as a sequence of shocks that bosted the current account. Unless there are further shocks moving the trade balance upward we expect a gradual decline of the German current account surplus. 29