Jean Pisani-Ferry, currently advising the French government and former director of Bruegel (the Brussels-based economic think tank) has written a heartfelt plea for more stability in the Commission’s estimates of potential output. The reason is straightforward. The Eurozone’s fiscal rules require meeting targets for cyclically adjusted deficits within the next year or two. Every time estimates of potential output change, the target for the actual deficit also changes, and policy often has to respond immediately to meet the new targets.
Pisani-Ferry of course understands why this happens, and why cyclical adjustment makes sense in principle. He is not advocating returning to the days when targets ignored the economic cycle. However the problem he clearly has is in communicating to policy makers who are not economists why they need to change actual policy simply because someone in Brussels has revised their estimate of potential GDP. He writes
“Members of parliament – who are not technicians – are understandably disturbed when they are asked to pass a revised budget in response to an updated estimate. Not knowing the whys and wherefores, they end up perceiving such revisions as a source of artificial instability.”
However an obvious objection to his proposal might involve the following scenario. To meet its target the government is embarking on austerity which is also reducing GDP. The Commission gets new information which leads it to revise up its estimate of potential GDP, implying the need for less austerity. Should the Commission ignore this information for the sake of stability?
I would suggest that the ‘non- technical’ instincts of policymakers are right in this case, but the reason is more basic. Short term fixed date targets for the deficit are a source of instability. There is no economic reason to have such short term deficit targets, and there are plenty of very sound economic reasons not to have targets of this kind. In essence this is because the deficit should be a shock absorber, but by targeting it you make taxes or spending the shock absorber. Hence the perceived, and actual, instability.
It would be much better, as Jonathan Portes and I argue, to have deficit targets for 5 years ahead. Whether these should be fixed date or rolling targets would depend on how trustworthy the government was, and whether there was an independent and robust fiscal council that could provide an ‘implementation incentive’ for the government. (We would argue in addition that fiscal policy in the Eurozone needs to play a countercyclical role, both at the individual country level to correct imbalances within the zone, and at the aggregate level if interest rates are at the Zero Lower Bound.)
Would such targets need to be cyclically adjusted? In the context of an economy with its own monetary policy we would argue not, because within five years the central bank should have eliminated any output gap (in expectation). Whether cyclical correction via competitiveness effects works so quickly is less clear, and if it does not cyclical correction would still be required. However I suspect that if targets were for five years ahead, revisions caused by new estimates of potential would be less problematic, because the need for an immediate policy change would be reduced. (As an example, when the OBR first revised its estimate of potential in the UK, Osborne’s response was to extend austerity into the next parliament, rather than intensify current austerity.)
The key point is that targets for the deficit just one or two years ahead are foolish things to have, and cyclically correcting the target only makes them slightly less foolish. Indeed, I would go so far as to say they are primitive in macroeconomic terms. It is like telling consumers that they shouldn’t smooth their consumption, but instead vary their spending or income to keep their wealth at some fixed target level. You would only want to do that to a child, and policymakers should not be treated as children.
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