Ljubljana, 19/06/2012 Fiscal Consolidation and Structural Reforms in OECD Countries International Conference organized by the Institute of Macroeconomic.

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Presentation transcript:

Ljubljana, 19/06/2012 Fiscal Consolidation and Structural Reforms in OECD Countries International Conference organized by the Institute of Macroeconomic Analysis and Development – Managing Macroeconomic Imbalances 19 June 2012, Ljubljana Rafal Kierzenkowski OECD, Economics Department, Head of Slovenia desk

2 Economic outlook The size of the fiscal challenge Growth-friendly consolidation instruments Structural reforms (labour and product market) Key challenges facing Slovenia to restart growth Outline

3 Economic outlook Outline

4 Economic outlook Real GDP growth, in per cent United States Euro area Japan Total OECD Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database. The outlook for OECD countries

5 World growth sustained by emerging economies Contribution to annualised quarterly world real GDP growth, percentage points Note: Calculated using moving nominal GDP weights, based on national GDP at purchasing power parities. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database. Economic outlook

6 High labour market slack is set to persist… Economic outlook Unemployment and estimated NAIRU in the OECD area 1. NAIRU is based on OECD estimates. For the United States, it has not been adjusted for the effect of extended unemployment benefit duration. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database.

7 …but jobless rates are diverging in key regions Economic outlook Unemployment rate, percentage of labour force Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database.

8 Business confidence is uneven Economic outlook Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for manufacturing and services Note: Values greater than 50 signify an improvement in economic activity. Source: Markit Economics Limited.

9 Real house prices are falling in many countries Economic outlook Proportion of countries with rising house prices, based on quarterly changes Note: House prices deflated by the private consumption deflator, published and forecasted. Calculation based on 21 countries (18 in 2011q4 and 10 available in 2012q1) Source: National sources.

10 Deleveraging has barely begun in the euro area Economic outlook Household gross debt, percentage of net disposable income Note: Data for USA and Japan are not consolidated. For 2011 Q3 data are growth rates (2010 end of year to 2011 Q3) of balance sheets published by US Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan, and ECB. Euro area 3 is Germany, France and Italy. Source: OECD Annual National Accounts.

11 Underlying inflation is likely to remain moderate Economic outlook Core inflation, 4-quarter percentage change Note: United States - deflator of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) excluding food and energy; Euro area - harmonised index of consumer prices (HICP) excluding food, energy, tobacco and alcohol; Japan - consumer price index (CPI) excluding food and energy. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database.

12 Monetary policy rates remain ultra low Economic outlook Policy interest rates, in per cent Source: Datastream.

13 Central banks have expanded asset purchases Economic outlook Central bank liabilities, local currency Source: Federal Reserve; Bank of Japan; and European Central Bank.

14 The size of the fiscal challenge Outline

15 Public gross debt has risen to high levels Fiscal challenge Source: OECD Economic Outlook 90 Database.

16 Fiscal consolidation mix Note: Total consolidation is the projected difference in the underlying primary balance; revenue side is the projected increase in the underlying receipts excluding interest earned on financial assets; and spending side is the projected decline in the underlying primary spending excluding interest payments on debt. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database; and OECD calculations. Change in the underlying primary balance , in per cent of potential GDP Fiscal challenge

17 Government debt accumulation is slowing Government gross financial liabilities, per cent of GDP Note: Change in debt includes cumulated deficit for and , debt-increasing equity participation in companies and the impact of GDP growth. For Norway cumulated deficits correspond to mainland only. Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database. Fiscal challenge

18 Public debt sustainability remains a LT challenge Fiscal gaps from 2013 for debt to reach 50% of GDP by 2050 Note: Low health assumes policy action curbs health spending growth. High health is the additional cost pressure in the absence of these policy actions. Source: OECD calculations. Fiscal challenge

19 Growth-friendly consolidation instruments Outline

20 Short-term considerations: - Reduce borrowing costs - Insure against rollover risks - Reap non-Keynesian effects Long-term considerations: - Limit negative effects of public debt on long-term growth - Reduce future costs of population ageing - Respect other policy objectives, such as: Raising public sector efficiency Eliminating wasteful spending Raising taxes on negatives externalities Reconsider tax expenditures Why consolidate? Growth-friendly consolidation

21 Improve health care efficiency Note: Potential savings represent the difference between a no-reform scenario and a scenario where countries would exploit efficiency gains. The no-reform scenario assumes that between 2007 and 2017 life expectancy and spending increase at the same pace as over the previous 10 years and that the mix between public and private spending remains constant over time. Source: Joumard, I., P. Hoeller, C. André and C. Nicq (2010), Health Care Systems: Efficiency and Policy Settings. Budgetary savings from improved efficiency in health care systems Growth-friendly consolidation

22 Boost education efficiency Source: Sutherland et al. (2007) Budgetary savings from improved efficiency in primary and secondary education Growth-friendly consolidation

23 Better target social spending Source: Whiteford, P. (2009), Transfer Issues and Directions for Reform: Australian Transfer Policy in Comparative Perspective, Paper presented for Australias Future Tax and Transfer Policy Conference, Department of the Treasury and Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, Melbourne, June. Share of social transfers received by the top half of the population in 2005 Growth-friendly consolidation

24 Shift to less distortionary taxation Source: OECD Revenue Statistics database. Recurrent tax revenues from immovable property, 2009 Growth-friendly consolidation

25 Increase environmental tax revenues Source: OECD Revenue Statistics database. Source: OECD/EEA database on instruments used for environmental policy and natural resources management. Growth-friendly consolidation

26 Foster value added tax performance Note: The VAT revenue ratio measures the difference between the VAT revenue actually collected and what would theoretically be raised if VAT was applied at the standard rate to the entire potential tax base in a pure VAT regime and all revenue was collected: The VAT revenue ratio equals VAT Revenue/(Consumption * Standard VAT rate)*100. Source: OECD (2011), Consumption Tax Trends 2010: VAT/GST and Excise Rates, Trends and Administration Issues. The VAT revenue ratio, average Growth-friendly consolidation

27 Continue pension reforms Source: OECD calculations. Implicit taxes on continued work at older ages versus pension up-take, % average worker earnings Growth-friendly consolidation

28 Structural reforms (labour and product market) Outline

29 The crisis has acted as a catalyst for reforms Structural reforms Note: The responsiveness rate is based on a scoring system in which each priority set in the previous edition of Going for Growth rakes a value of one if "significant" action is taken the following year, and zero if not. Average across OECD countries excluding Chile, Estonia, Israel and Slovenia. Responsiveness to Going for Growth recommendations across the OECD,

30 Reform progress greater in low-income countries Structural reforms Note: The indicator is the ratio of the total number of years in which some action is taken to address the policy priority to the total number of years in which the policy priority has been identified. Source: OECD Going for Growth 2012.

31 Reform implementation and fiscal stance Structural reforms Source: OECD Economic Outlook 90 Database (for fiscal consolidation projections). Overall responsiveness to Going for Growth priorities and consolidation effort

32 Reform packages can have short-term benefits Structural reforms Source: Cacciatore, M., R. Duval and G. Fiori (2012), Short-term Pain or Gain? A DSGE Model-based Analysis of the Short- term Effects of Structural Reforms in Labour and Product Markets, OECD Economics Department Working Papers, forthcoming. A package combining a decline in entry barriers, a reduction in unemployment benefit replacement rate and a relaxation of job protection in a rigid economy

33 Unemployment benefit reforms Structural reforms Note: *** and ** represent statistical significance at the 1 and 5% levels, respectively. The simulation is based on the median-sized reform observed in the estimation sample. In Panel B, the impact of the reform is estimated controlling for the initial unemployment benefit replacement rate. Source: Bouis, R. et al. (2012), The Short-term Effects of Structural Reforms: an Empirical Analysis, OECD Economics Department Working Papers. Such reforms can have a fairly quick positive impact on labour utilisation A. Change in aggregate employment rate following a "typical" reduction in initial unemployment benefit replacement rate B. Change in youth unemployment rate following a "typical" reduction in unemployment benefit duration

34 Reforms of job protection Structural reforms Note: *** and * represent statistical significance at the 1 and 10% levels, respectively. The simulation is based on the median-sized reform observed in the estimation sample. Source: Bouis, R. et al. (2012), The Short-term Effects of Structural Reforms: an Empirical Analysis, OECD Economics Department Working Papers. Change in aggregate employment following a typical reduction in job protection on temporary contracts

35 Active labour market policies Structural reforms Note: *** and ** represent statistical significance at the 1 and 5% levels, respectively. The simulation is based on the median-sized reform observed in the estimation sample. Source: Bouis, R. et al. (2012), The Short-term Effects of Structural Reforms: an Empirical Analysis, OECD Economics Department Working Papers. Change in aggregate employment following a typical increase in public spending on ALMP employment incentives

36 Administrative extensions of collective agreements Structural reforms Note: ** and * represent statistical significance at the 5 and 10% levels, respectively. The simulation is based on the median- sized reform observed in the estimation sample. Source: Bouis, R. et al. (2012), The Short-term Effects of Structural Reforms: an Empirical Analysis, OECD Economics Department Working Papers. Change in female unemployment following a decline in excess bargaining coverage

37 Product market reforms Structural reforms Note: ** represents statistical significance at the 5% level. The simulation is based on the median-sized reform observed in the estimation sample. Source: Bouis, R. et al. (2012), The Short-term Effects of Structural Reforms: an Empirical Analysis, OECD Economics Department Working Papers. Change in aggregate labour force participation following a typical product market reform

38 The cycle is important Structural reforms Note: The lower line corresponds to the impact of the reform during bad times, while the upper line represents the impact during good times, corresponding to the minimum and maximum levels of the unemployment gap, respectively, as observed across the sample (i.e. across all countries and time). The central broken line represents the impact of the reform when the unemployment gap equals its median value. Source: Bouis, R. et al. (2012), The Short-term Effects of Structural Reforms: an Empirical Analysis, OECD Economics Department Working Papers. Change in aggregate employment following a typical reduction in initial unemployment benefit replacement rate

39 Key challenges facing Slovenia to restart growth Outline

40 Continue fiscal consolidation Source: OECD Economic Outlook 91 database. Key challenges for Slovenia

41 Key challenges for Slovenia Reform the pension system Impact of the failed pension reform on public expenditure, per cent of GDP Source: M. Čok, J. Sambt and B. Majcen (2010), Financial Implications of the Proposed Reforms, Report of the Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana.

42 Key challenges for Slovenia Recapitalize the banking sector Banks with CAR<8 per cent after complete write-off of impaired loans Source: European Banking Coordination Vienna Initiative, Working Group on NPLs in Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe, March 2012.

43 Key challenges for Slovenia Reduce corporate leverage 1. Calculated as total liabilities less shares and other equity as a percentage of shares and other equity; non-consolidated data. 2. Total loans. The household sector includes non-profit institutions serving households. Source: OECD (2012), OECD National Accounts Statistics and OECD Economic Outlook: Statistics and Projections (databases), June.

44 Tackle labour market dualism Key challenges for Slovenia Employment protection legislation, index of 0-6 from least to most restrictive Source: Going for Growth (2012).

45 Improve competitiveness Export performance, 2000= Ratio between export volumes and export markets for total goods and services. 2. Thirteen euro area countries that are also OECD member countries, excluding Slovenia and Slovak Republic. Source: OECD (2012), OECD Economic Outlook: Statistics and Projections (database), June. Key challenges for Slovenia