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June 04, 2007
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Monday
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Jamadi-ul-Awwal 18, 1428
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Rebalancing in major economies
By M. Ziauddin
Twice a year, the OECD Economic Outlook analyses the major trends and examines the economic policies to foster high and sustainable growth in member countries. The latest one issued late last month (May) covers the outlook to end-2008. In addition to the themes featured regularly the new report contains two special chapters on globalisation and fiscal consolidation.
Forthcoming developments in major non-OECD economies are evaluated in detail.
Recent “hard data”, as well as consumer and business confidence as presented in the Outlook, suggest that in the euro area a vibrant German-led recovery has remained on track, despite a large VAT hike at the start of this year. Interestingly, the so-far lagging Italian economy has been sharing in the upswing, notwithstanding the volatility of the quarterly accounts. All told, the recovery in Germany and Italy in 2006-07 is set to be much stronger than initially expected.
The Outlook wants the members to continue the policy of rebalancing. However, the continuation of this policy could pose risks as well, it warns as according to the Outlook several other sources of imbalance may still be standing in the way of sustained and steady growth.
On the monetary front, there is a risk that, in many places, the balance between aggregate demand and supply has already started shifting towards overheating, at a time when the appetite for fiscal tightening may be waning.
Looking further ahead, there is also little sign that, once adjusted for cyclical influences, current account imbalances have retreated in the United States, while they are getting even more pronounced in countries such as China and Japan, where time and again household demand seems to be lagging behind.
Imbalances may have developed in financial and housing markets too.
As a general rule, spreads on risky bonds are close to historical lows and for a range of financial assets OECD analysis suggests that risk may be under-priced. Equity prices may be somewhat on the high side, for example, although current potential overvaluation in stock markets pales in comparison with the excesses that prevailed in the late 1990s. Last but not least, housing investment is at ten-year highs in many OECD countries.
According to the Outlook assessing more precisely the extent of such remaining imbalances is of some importance to gauge the uncertainties surrounding member countries’ smooth rebalancing scenario.
In the US case, the diagnosis is said to be tricky. On the one hand, the issue may just be one of an over-extended housing market still in need of correction. But such a sanguine assessment it is believed may need to be qualified in at least two ways. First, recent housing developments may point to the risk of a slower overall recovery.
Compared to previous OECD forecasts, the housing sector has cooled somewhat more than expected, leading to a disquieting build-up in the stock of unsold housing.
Second, the slowdown of the US economy could turn out to be of a broader nature. It might involve a mild form of stagflation, with weaker trend productivity and output growth than assumed heretofore translating into more overheating.
Weaker prospects for long-term growth would help to explain, for instance, why inflation has been more persistent than expected and why business investment faltered recently, despite ample profits and still favourable financial market conditions.
The amount of residual economic slack is also said to be uncertain in some of the other main OECD regions, notably in Continental Europe and the United Kingdom. This constitutes a challenge for central banks which, on both sides of the Atlantic, should probably err on the side of tightness.
In the United States, with core inflation still higher than desired and unemployment below most estimates of its sustainable level, there is a case for keeping a slightly restrictive monetary stance and not cutting policy rates in 2007. There may even be a case for additional tightening in the United Kingdom, should inflationary pressures persist, and more clearly so in the euro area, where core inflation has essentially reached the two per cent mark, while activity is set to continue to expand vigorously.
In Japan, by contrast, where deflation has not yet been rooted out and economic slack may be larger than expected, policy rates, according to the Outlook would need to remain on hold for some time.
Fiscal policy has a role to play in smoothing out the current economic upswing, in improving the long-term sustainability of public finances in most OECD countries, and in providing enough scope for automatic stabilisers to act in the next downturn. Policymakers are facing treacherous waters, however. On the positive side, public deficits have finally been shrinking, in most OECD countries, over the past two or three years.
However, consolidation has been overly reliant on cyclical revenue gains rather than on lasting spending restraint. Looking forward, decisive reductions in structural deficits appear both highly desirable and rather unlikely. But, given the high stakes, there is at the very least a need to avoid, over the next few years, the unravelling of past fiscal consolidation.
In such a challenging context, policymakers need to save current tax windfalls, so that fiscal policy does not exacerbate, in the short run, the present economic upswing while preventing, in the long run, the repeat of those depressing “post-boom” budgetary crises of the past. But spending pressures will be extremely strong, given the considerable magnitude of the unforeseen capital and corporate tax receipts. Sticking to tight spending plans and waiting long enough before contemplating new tax cuts should be the “categorical imperative” for forward-looking policymakers.
Against this worrying backdrop, this Economic Outlook has incorporated a special chapter on the political economy of fiscal consolidation, trying to infer from past experiences the policies and institutional factors that underpin successes and failures. This work yields challenging conclusions. It suggests, for instance, that successful and lasting consolidations often emerge from fiscal crisis and work better when conducted from the expenditure side. It also underlines the useful role that can be played by fiscal rules, in particular those that include a focus on expenditure control alongside budget-balance rules.
The Outlook noted that political will and collective wisdom will be needed to achieve a successful conclusion of WTO negotiations. It warned that the potential costs of stalling trade integration, possibly followed by various sorts of back-pedalling, could be of unforeseen magnitude.
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