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The future of euro area: do we need a fully-fledged fiscal union? Charles Wyplosz The Graduate Institute, Geneva Council for Budget Responsibility of Slovakia.

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Presentation on theme: "The future of euro area: do we need a fully-fledged fiscal union? Charles Wyplosz The Graduate Institute, Geneva Council for Budget Responsibility of Slovakia."— Presentation transcript:

1 The future of euro area: do we need a fully-fledged fiscal union? Charles Wyplosz The Graduate Institute, Geneva Council for Budget Responsibility of Slovakia Seminar on Macroeconomic and Fiscal Issues Bratislava, May 5, 2014

2 Do we need a fiscal union? No An economically ill-justified judgment A political mistake

3 The economic misjudgment Reasoning  Crisis has shown the need for mutual support Fiscal discipline limits use of national fiscal policies Some federal support needed to make up  More generally, monetary union needs political union This includes banking union and fiscal union Remove ECB from potential transfers Provide resources for bank resolution Wrong

4 Fiscal discipline Fiscal discipline absolutely needed within monetary union  Moral hazard Vis a vis other member countries Vis a vis ECB  Contagion risk Solution: centralization  Common rule  Enforcement by Commission and Council

5 The flaws of centralization Different countries require different rules  Presidential vs. parliamentary  Single majority vs. coalition governments Fiscal authority is national  Central interference conflicts with democratic principles  “Brussels” against voters  Result: disconnect between sovereignty and enforcement

6 Centralization has failed Percent deficits above 3% (original members)

7 Centralization has failed Public debts (% GDP)

8 The unspoken alternative: decentralization A great example: US states  Sovereign in fiscal policy matters  All but one have rules Own enforcement mechanisms (State Supreme Courts) Break occurred in 1840s  No Treaty, no law  Just no bailout decision by US Congress  Then each state invented its own rules

9 Decentralization works better Debt/GDP ratios Two bailouts No bailouts since 1840s Bailouts must be strictly forbidden

10 Implications Fiscal Union seen as necessary for bailouts  Bailouts ought to be strictly forbidden Fiscal Union seen as necessary to deal with cyclical disturbances  Indeed the US Federal Model  But: the equivalence principle

11 The equivalence principle Equivalence: when in recession  Insurance: receive support from Federal level Pay back in providing insurance to other countries  Borrow to spend, reimburse later Can easily be done when fiscally disciplined No need for an insurance system The US  Old fashioned state budget rules prevent borrowing  Insurance Not a model for Europe in this respect Creates moral hazard Incentive to fiscal discipline

12 The economic misjudgment Reasoning  Crisis has shown the need for mutual support Fiscal discipline limits use of national fiscal policies Some federal support needed to make up  More generally, monetary union needs political union This includes banking union and fiscal union Remove ECB from potential transfers Provide resources for bank resolution Wrong ✔ ✔ YES NO ✔

13 Monetary union needs a central bank No bailout but lender in last resort  To banks  Not to government (no-bailout clause is crucial) Bailing out banks  SSM, half done  SRM, quarter done Some funds are OK, but will never be enough  Transfers across countries? Not if clear rules of engagement Not a fiscal union real

14 … and a political mistake Fiscal Union requires sovereignty transfers  Some common spending  Some taxing power No opposition in principle (US of Europe)  But requires voters’ consent

15 Not the right time, alas “Whatever it takes”

16 Conclusion One day, we will have a fiscal union Not now  Too politically dangerous, not needed Waste of time, better things to do  SSM and SRM  A real central bank  Legacy debts


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