Presentation Transcript
Slide1 : Fiscal Policy and Democracy in Europe
Österreichische Nationalbank, Wien, 5.11. 2004 Stefan Collignon Professor of European Political Economy LSE
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution The Constitutional Treaty brings many innovations
Efficiency in policy making
Greater role of EP
Citizens and states as equal source of European sovereignty (art.1)
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution But the Constitutional Treaty
Has not innovated on fiscal policy
Has even reduced the EU-budget powers of the European Parliament
Instead: SGP passes from rule-based to arbitrary arrangement among governments
Pre-democratic fiscal policy
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Fiscal policy matters for economy
Automatic stabilizers smoothen disposable income and demand
Discretionary tax policies aim at supply side effects
ECB Monthly Bulletin, April 2004
But also for democracy
Imposing rules on democratically elected Govts?
The irony of new MS: surrender democracy at the door
“No taxation without representation”
Therefore: only national competence?
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Fiscal federalism assigns functions to jurisdictions:
Allocation policy : decentralised
Preference heterogeneity
Stabilisation policy: centralised
Collective action problem
Redistribution policy : centralised
Collective action problem
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Europe’s fiscal Constitution is not optimal:
The bulk of spending is through national budgets
EU budget only 1% of GDP
SGP is only loose coordination tool
What matters for macroeconomic stability is the interaction of monetary policy with the aggregate fiscal stance
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Stabilisation policy is not optimal
Automatic stabilisers work
But SGP is far from being applied
Uncoordinated fiscal policy led to monetary tightening
SGP can not guarantee coherent aggregate fiscal policy stance
SGP introduces rigidity into the conduct of fiscal policy
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Efficient stabilisation requires:
Capacity to respond to symmetric and asymmetric shocks
Vertical flexibility responds to symmetric shocks
Horizontal flexibility responds to asymmetric shocks
Reflect collective preferences about the intergenerational burden sharing
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Vertical flexibility
In EMU the appropriate response to symmetric shocks are determined by the interaction between monetary and aggregate fiscal policy
At the moment fiscal policy is constrained by Excessive deficit procedure
Balanced structural budgets are not realised
the main burden is on monetary policy
Performance since the start of EMU has been benign
Shocks have been less severe
What about the future?
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Horizontal flexibility
Asymmetric shocks also have been less severe
Are symmetric shocks disappearing in EMU?
Danger of heterogeneous collective preferences if political system does not allow collective deliberation and choice
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Horizontal flexibility can be achieved by
Intertemporal transfers
Regional governments borrow to sooth income
Constrained by SGP
Interregional transfers
Federal system compensates asymmetric shocks
E.g. Länderfinanzausgleich
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution In the EU interregional transfers do not reflect asymmetric shocks
EU interregional transfers exclusively follow a redistribution logic
EU budget redistributes income to farmers and poor regions
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Asymmetric shocks lead to transnational intertemporal borrowing
The mode of financing the EU budget causes distortions in national budget policies
EU budget is financed by a levy on national budgets
Net contributors use domestically raised income for expenditure elsewhere
Hence, they borrow for others
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution For example:
Germany’s net contribution is 0.24% of GDP
Its actual deficit in 2002 was 3.53%
Without Net Contribution: 3.28 %
France: Net Contribution of 0.14 %
Actual deficit 3.10 %
Without net contribution: 2.96 %
Portugal received net contribution of 2.08 %
Actual deficit: 2.71
Without net contribution: 4.79 %
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution This system is unsustainable !
National finance ministers will wish to reduce net contributions
especially when under the pressure of reducing deficits under the SGP
The European Union will have less and less the financial means to implement its policies
Europe’s present fiscal constitution carries the risk of European Disintegration
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution What is the solution?
We need to integrate fiscal policy at the European level
Integrate national and EU budgets
Define aggregate fiscal policy stance in Euroland
Finance EU budget by Euro-tax
Create democratic input legitimacy in addition to efficient output legitimacy
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Defining the aggregate fiscal policy stance
Top down: define the aggregate deficit that is desirable given the economic environment
Vertical flexibility
Give democratic legitimacy to this choice
If EU policy stance must have authority over partial national preferences, it requires a vote reflecting all European citizens
European Parliament should vote macroeconomic framework law: BEPG
Democratic debates will transform collective preferences
Josef Christl: “dialogue will help bridge the gap between political European elite and European citizens”
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Assign deficit quota to decentralised jurisdictions
Horizontal flexibility
Tradable deficit permits most elegant solution
Solves problem with “domestic stability pacts”
Makes decentralised fiscals decisions accountable and coherent with monetary policy
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Reform the financing of EU Budget
The “own resources” must become own resources
Introduce Eurotax
Vat
Corporate tax
Capital income
Energy tax
Make the European Parliament responsible for taxing and spending
Only European-wide debates can foster European collective preferences for public goods
Co-legislation with Council as there may exist esternalities
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution To summarise
Europe’s fiscal constitution is severely handicapped
The Constitutional Treaty does not remedy
With the single market and the euro European citizens share many more public goods, their
res publica
These goods need an efficient and democratic common management
Europe’s fiscal Constitution : Europe’s fiscal Constitution Conclusion
Ceterum censeo:
pactum stabilitatis esse delendum
Et rem publicam europaeam esse errigendam
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