Fiscal Policy and the Global Crisis Presentation at Koҫ University, Istanbul Carlo Cottarelli Director IMF Fiscal Affairs Department June 9, 2009 1
Two fiscal questions What is the appropriate fiscal policy in the short term.and what does this imply for the fiscal outlook? What are the key elements of a fiscal strategy to ensure fiscal solvency? 2
John Maynard Keynes 3
??? Charles Ponzi 4
Here is the Challenge To allow fiscal policy to support the economy While reassuring markets that this is not a Ponzi scheme 5
Growth Projections 12 10 8 6 4 2 0-2 -4-6 World Advanced economies Real GDP Growth (in percent; QoQ; ; saar) Emerging and Developing economies -8 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 6
Unemployment Rate Projections Unemployment Rate (in percent) 12 10 Euro area 8 U.K. 6 U.S. Japan 4 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2 7
What roles can government play? Interventions to address the financial sector problems Fiscal policy to support aggregate demand 8
Support Measures with Immediate Effect on Government Debt United Kingdom Japan Canada Korea United States Spain Germany France Saudi Arabia Russia Argentina Italy Australia India China Turkey Indonesia Brazil Average Upfront Financing, G-20 Advanced Economies Purchase of Assets and Lending by Treasury Capital Injection 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 (In percent of GDP) 9
Gross and Net Fiscal Cost of Banking Crises (in Percent of GDP) Indonesia 1997 Argentina 1980 Jamaica 1996 Thailand 1997 Chile 1981 Turkey 2000 Korea 1997 Côte d Ivoire 1988 Dominican Republic 2003 Ecuador 1998 Uruguay 2002 Mexico 1994 Malaysia 1997 Venezuela 1994 Bulgaria 1996 Nicaragua 2000 Philippines 1997 Brazil 1994 Paraguay 1995 Finland 1991 Vietnam 1997 Argentina 2001 Japan 1997 Croatia 1998 Czech Republic 1996 Colombia 1998 Bolivia 1994 Russia 1998 Argentina 1989 Ghana 1982 Colombia 1982 Sri Lanka 1989 United States 1988 Sweden 1991 Lithuania 1995 Latvia 1995 Norway 1991 Argentina 1995 Estonia 1992 Brazil 1990 Ukraine 1998 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Source: Laeven and Valencia (2008), Japan Deposit Insurance Corporation, Hoelscher and Quintyn (2003), and IMF staff estimates. Net Cost Recovery 10
24 Support without Immediate Effect on Government Debt In percent of GDP 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 Central Bank Support and Liquidity Provision Guarantees Gross Cost from Financial Sector Support Measures 8 6 4 2 0 G-20 countries Advanced economies Emerging economies G-20 countries Advanced economies Emerging economies 11
Fiscal Stimulus Implementation of fiscal stimulus in advanced and emerging economies that have fiscal space Timely Large Lasting Diversified Contingent Collective Sustainable 12
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Fiscal Implications Out of the Control of Governments Automatic stabilizers Strong decline in asset prices and commodity prices Crisis impact on funded pension schemes 14
Pension Plan Assets by Country, End-2007 100 90 Asset allocation (percent equities and mutual funds) 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 Ireland Brazil Hong Kong Japan Norway France Argentina Sweden Chile South Africa Canada United Kingdom Finland Switzerland Australia United States Netherlands Iceland Denmark Mexico 10 0 0 50 100 150 Total pension assets (percent of GDP) 15
Intervention to Support Aggregate Demand (2008-2010) 2010) Automatic Stabilizers, Other Nondiscretionary Factors, and Discretionary Measures Emerging G-20 countries Automatic Stabilizers Other Nondiscretionary Factors Discretionary Measures Advanced G-20 countries G-20 countries 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 16
Intervention to Support Aggregate Demand G-20 Countries: Discretionary Measures, 2009 United States United Kingdom Turkey South Africa Saudi Arabia Russia Mexico Korea Japan Italy Indonesia India Germany France China Canada Brazil Australia Argentina Annual average, G-20 countries: 2 percent of GDP 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 17
Outlook for Public Finances in Advanced G-20 G Countries (In percent of GDP) 12 120 10 110 8 100 6 4 Fiscal deficit (left scale) Government debt (right scale) 90 80 2 70 0 2000 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 60 18
Outlook for Public Finances in Emerging Market G-20 G Countries 7 (In percent of GDP) 60 6 5 4 55 50 3 2 1 0 Fiscal deficit (left scale) Government debt (right scale) 45 40 35-1 2000 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 30 19
Prolonged Slowdown/Higher Interest Rate/Contingent Liability Shock Government Debt (In percent of GDP) 1/ 160 150 Advanced G-20 G Countries 70 65 Emerging Market G-20 G Countries 140 130 Alternative scenario 60 55 120 110 100 Base case 50 45 Alternative scenario 90 40 80 70 2007 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 Source: IMF staff estimates. 1/ Figure reports results of a 2 percentage point decline in growth, and a 200 basis point increase in real interest rates relative to the baseline starting in 2009; as well as a contingent liability shock corresponding to expected cost of guarantees (column A in Table A4.1 in Appendix IV). Averages based on PPP GDP weights. 35 30 Base case 2007 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 20
How worried should we be? 21
250 200 150 100 50 0 5-year Sovereign Credit Default Swap (CDS) Spreads in Selected Advanced G-20 G Countries Italy UK Japan US France Germany 22 7/1/08 7/31/08 8/30/08 9/29/08 10/29/08 11/28/08 12/28/08 1/27/09 2/26/09 3/28/09 4/27/09 5/28/09 (In basis points)
Nominal Yields 6 5.5 10 Year Government Bond Yields in Selected G20 Countries (In percentage points) 5 4.5 Italy 4 3.5 France UK US Germany 3 2.5 2 1.5 Japan 1 9/1/08 10/1/08 10/31/08 11/30/08 12/30/08 1/29/09 2/28/09 3/30/09 4/29/09 5/28/09 23
Fiscal Solvency Confidence in governments solvency has been a source of stability Critical to ensure that challenging fiscal outlook does not raise doubts about solvency 24
What should be done? 25
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND The State of Public Finances: Outlook and Medium-Term Policies After the 2008 Crisis Prepared by the Fiscal Affairs Department In cooperation with other departments Approved by Carlo Cottarelli March 6, 2009 Contents Page Executive Summary...3 I. Introduction...4 II. Fiscal Implications of the Crisis: Direct Costs...5 A. Headline Support to Financial Sectors...6 B. Net Cost over the Medium Term...8 C. Potential Total Cost of Implicit and Explicit Guarantees...10 III. Fiscal Implications of the Crisis: The Cost of the Recession...10 A. Automatic Stabilizers...10 B. Other Non-discretionary Effects...11 C. Discretionary Responses to the Crisis...13 IV. Fiscal Implications of the Financial Crisis: Effects Through the Funded Component of the Pension System...17 A. Losses of Funded Pension Schemes...17 B. Risks for Fiscal Accounts...18 V. The Outlook for Public Finances in Light of the Crisis...21 A. Short-Term Outlook...21 B. The Medium-Term Outlook and Risk Assessment...24 VI. The Risk for Fiscal Solvency and the Appropriate Policy Response...29 A. The Level of Government Debt...31 B. The Dynamics of Government Debt: Current and Future Deficits...36 C. The Way Forward...39 VII. Issues for Discussion...48 26
Four-Pillar Strategy: I Fiscal stimulus Temporary measures.but because the decline in private sector demand is likely to be long-lasting, lasting, prolonged measures Avoid permanent raise in fiscal deficits 27
Four-Pillar Strategy: II Medium-term fiscal frameworks Fiscal rules Revisions to Budgetary procedures Introduction of fiscal councils Manage and ultimately dispose of financial sector assets acquired Governments should commit to tighten fiscal policy in future good times, now that fiscal policy has been relaxed during bad ones. 28
Four-Pillar Strategy: III Structural reforms to enhance growth Emerging Market Economies: Selected Debt Reduction Episodes Country/Time period (in percent of GDP) Initial level of Debt debt reduction Primary surplus Contribution to debt reduction Growth - Real exchange interest rate differential rate appreciation Other Poland (1993-98) 98) 84.3 47.7 3.3 22.6 9.6 12.1 Chile (1990-1998) 1998) 45.9 33.0 30.0 11.5 3.9-12.5 Ecuador (1988-1990) 1990) 113.5 32.1 4.1 11.4-11.8 28.4 Pakistan (2001-07) 07) 84.8 29.7 6.4 17.1 5.1 1.0 Egypt (2003-07) 07) 114.9 27.7-11.0 29.9 1.9 6.8 Jamaica (2002-07) 07) 122.0 27.4 50.8-30.3 3.8 3.2 Brazil (2002-05) 05) 85.0 20.8 12.4 1.7 4.6 2.1 Colombia (2002-07) 07) 49.8 16.4 14.4 1.0 4.6-3.6 Malaysia (2003-07) 07) 44.4 14.5-4.3 8.3 2.4 8.1 Tunisia (2001-07) 07) 62.7 11.8-0.7 8.1 6.4-2.0 Average (unweighted( unweighted) 80.7 26.1 10.6 8.1 3.0 4.4 Sources: IMF, World Economic Outlook; and IMF staff estimates 29
Four-Pillar Strategy: IV Tackle long-run pressures from population aging Net Present Value of Impact on Fiscal Deficit of Crisis and Aging-Related Spending Aging Crisis 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 (In percent of GDP) 30
Four-Pillar Strategy: IV Tackle long-run pressures from population aging Net Present Value of Impact on Fiscal Deficit of Crisis and Aging-Related Spending (In percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated) 1/, 2/ Country Crisis Aging Crisis/Aging Australia 28 482 5.8 Canada 18 726 2.5 France 30 276 10.9 Germany 27 280 9.7 Italy 34 169 20.3 Japan 35 158 22.1 Korea 20 683 2.9 Mexico 13 261 4.8 Spain 37 652 5.6 United Kingdom 37 335 11.1 United States 34 495 6.9 Advanced G-20 G Countries 32 409 10.1 Source: IMF staff estimates. 1/ Table reports net present value of the impact on fiscal balance of the crisis and of aging-related spending increases reported in Table 6.1. The third column reports the ratio of the first column to the second column in percent. The discount rate used is 1 percent a year in excess of GDP growth for each country. Given that real growth is expected to average 3 percent a year, this is equivalent to applying an average real discount rate of 4 percent a year. For years after 2050, the calculation assumes the impact is the same as in 2050. 2/ Averages based on PPP GDP weights. 31
Thank you! 32