Edmund S.
Phelps, the 2006 Nobel laureate in economics, is Director of the Center on
Capitalism and Society at Columbia
University and author of
Mass Flourishing.
http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/what-greece-needs-to-prosper-by-edmund-s--phelps-2015-08
Looking at Greece , these
economists argue that a shift in fiscal policy to “austerity” – a smaller
public sector – has brought an acute deficiency of demand and thus a
depression. But this claim misreads history and exaggerates the power of
government spending.
Much of the
decline in employment in Greece
occurred prior to the sharp cuts in spending between 2012 and 2014 – owing, no
doubt, to sinking confidence in the government. Greek government spending per
quarter climbed to a plateau of around €13.5 billion ($14.8 billion) in
2009-2012, before falling to roughly €9.6 billion in 2014-2015. Yet the number
of job holders reached its high of 4.5 million in 2006-2009, and had fallen to
3.6 million by 2012. By the time Greece began to cut its budget, the
rate of unemployment – 9.6% of the labor force in 2009 – had already risen
almost to its recent level of 25.5%.
These
findings weigh heavily against the hypothesis that “austerity” has brought Greece to its
present plight. They indicate that Greece ’s turn away from the high
spending of 2008-2013 is not to blame for today’s mass unemployment.
Another
finding casts doubt on whether austerity actually was imposed on Greece .
Government spending has certainly fallen – but only to where it used to be:
€9.6 billion in the first quarter of this year is, in fact, higher than it was
as recently as 2003. So the premise of austerity appears to be wrong. Greece has not
departed from past fiscal norms; it has returned to them. Rather than
describing current government spending as “austere,” it would be more correct
to view it as an end to years of fiscal profligacy, culminating in 2013, when
the government’s budget deficit reached 12.3% of GDP and public debt climbed to
175% of GDP.
The “demand
school” might respond that, regardless of whether there is fiscal austerity
now, increased government spending (financed, of course, by debt) would impart
a permanent boost to employment. But Greece ’s recent experience suggests
otherwise. The huge rise in government spending from 2006 to the 2009-2013
period did produce employment gains, but they were not sustained.
The real
sticking point is that the government would have to issue bonds to finance its
extra spending. Assuming a limit to foreign investors’ willingness to buy these
bonds, Greeks would have to buy them. In an economy unequipped for growth,
household wealth relative to wages would soar, and the labor supply would
shrink, causing employment to contract.
So spending
more is not the remedy for Greece ’s
plight, just as spending less was not the cause. What is the remedy, then? No
amount of debt restructuring, even debt forgiveness, will suffice to achieve
prosperity (in the form of low unemployment and high job satisfaction). Such
measures would only help Greece
to revive government spending. Then the economy’s stultifying corporatism –
clientelism and cronyism in the public sector and vested interests and
entrenched elites in the private sector – would gain a new lease on life. The
European left may advocate that, but it would hardly be in Europe ’s
interest.
The remedy
must lie in adopting the right structural reforms. Whether or not the reforms
sought by the eurozone members raise the chances that their loans will be
repaid, these creditors have a political and economic interest in the monetary
union’s survival and development. They should also be ready to help Greece with the
costs of making the necessary changes.
But it is Greece itself
that must take charge of its reforms. And there are encouraging signs that
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is willing to take up that cause. But he will
need a sense of the required reforms. Greece must dismantle corporatist
arrangements and practices that obstruct whatever innovation and entrepreneurship
might emerge. Nurturing an abundance of imaginative innovators and vibrant
entrepreneurs requires embracing a vision of venturesome lives of creativity
and discovery.
Read more
at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/what-greece-needs-to-prosper-by-edmund-s--phelps-2015-08#ueEzjc1kEhWRBxcz.99
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