As everyone knows who has followed the current budget debate, U.S. fiscal policy needs more than a quick fix. It needs budget rules to put the debt and deficit on trajectories that are sustainable in the long run. Where better to look for workable rules than to countries that have done things right? Chile, which has managed to prosper under an intelligent set of budget rules, is a good place to start.
Chile's economic indicators are not the very best in each
category, but they score near the top in so many that it is arguably the
strongest economy in its region. In 2011 Chile is expecting 6.6 percent real
GDP growth. Inflation and unemployment are both moderate, at 4.0 percent and
7.2 percent, respectively. The government's budget is expected to end the year
in surplus by 1.3 percent of GDP. Gross government debt is 8.8 percent of GDP,
which is less than the government's holdings of financial assets, meaning that
net debt is negative. On top of all that, it has a current account surplus
approaching 2 percent of GDP.
The centerpiece of Chilean fiscal policy is a balanced
budget rule of a much more sophisticated variety than the one
endorsed last week by the U.S. House of Representatives. The House
bill calls for strict year-to-year balance of total receipts and outlays,
whereas Chile's rule requires annual balance of the structural budget. The two
are not at all the same.
The difference between an annually balanced budget and a
structurally balanced budget lies in the operation of an economy's automatic
stabilizers. Automatic stabilizers are elements of the budget that
tend to increase revenues during an expansion (such as taxes on incomes and
profits) and increase expenditures during a recession (such as spending for
unemployment compensation and antipoverty programs). When automatic stabilizers
are allowed to operate, the budget automatically swings toward surplus during
an expansion and toward deficit during a recession. The automatic move toward
surplus helps prevent overheating when the business cycle approaches its peak.
At the other end of the business cycle, the automatic stabilizers move toward
deficit and help to moderate the depth of the downturn.
When a requirement is in effect to balance the government's
budget on an annual basis, as it would be under the House proposal, automatic
stabilizers are disabled. During a recession, as unemployment benefits and
other income-support measures increase, other discretionary spending must be
cut, or taxes raised, to prevent a deficit from developing. Those changes tend
to make the recession worse than it otherwise would be. Similarly, an annual
balance rule provides no budget discipline during an expansion. Instead of
allowing a surplus to develop as the cycle approaches its peak, rising revenues
are used to finance tax cuts or expenditure increases, prolonging the expansion
at the risk of overheating. In short, such a rule makes fiscal policy procyclical.
A different kind of instability arises in countries that
have no explicit budget rules at all. In the absence of rules, fiscal policy
tends to be asymmetrical. During recessions, automatic stabilizers are allowed
to operate, leading to substantial deficits. During expansions, short-sighted politicians
override the automatic stabilizers. Instead of allowing a surplus to develop,
they use cyclical revenue increases to finance tax cuts and new spending
programs. The U.S. tax cuts of the early 2000s, combined with increased
military spending and introduction of the unfunded Medicare Part D, are a case
in point. That kind of asymmetrical fiscal policy is unsustainable in the long
run. The debt increases each time there is a recession and fails to shrink
during expansions. Eventually these policies cause the debt to grow to the
point of crisis.
Chile's approach is to reject both the procyclicality of a
strict annually balanced budget and the long-run unsustainability of
asymmetrical policy unconstrained by rules. Instead Chile aims for annual
balance of its structural
budget. The structural budget balance is the surplus or deficit excluding
automatic stabilizers, that is, the difference between the expenditures that
would be made and the revenues that would be collected if the economy were
operating at potential GDP. A structurally balanced budget guarantees long-run
sustainability of the national debt. At the same time, it permits automatic
stabilizers to operate freely, with symmetrical surpluses during expansions and
deficits during recessions to smooth the peaks and troughs of the business
cycle.
If this kind of fiscal policy rule is such a good idea, why
isn't it used everywhere? Attractive though it is in principle, the practical
implementation of a structurally balanced budget faces both technical and
political difficulties.
The difficulties begin with the need to estimate the
economy's output gap each year when preparing the budget. The
output gap is the difference between the current level of GDP and its potential
level, a positive number as the economy approaches the peak of the business
cycle and a negative number as it approaches the trough. The estimated size of
the output gap, in turn, provides the basis for estimating the permitted
surplus or deficit in the balance between revenues and expenditures for the
coming year.
Unfortunately, measuring the output gap is not a
cut-and-dried matter. A
recent study from the Federal Reserve explains that various methods
produce estimates of the output gap that differ by as much as two percentage
points. That is just the technical side of the problem. In practice, it is
necessary also to ensure that the output gap estimate is not politically
biased. That means the estimation cannot be left to the current government's
own staff. Politically appointed budget directors and finance ministers have a
consistent record of looking at the numbers through rose-colored glasses in
order to justify greater expenditures or lower tax rates. (See this
earlier post for a discussion of how chronic budget optimism helped
dig the fiscal hole that the United States currently finds itself in.)
In Chile, the law that implements the structurally balanced
budget rule assigns the job of estimating the output gap to an independent
panel of experts that meets annually for the purpose and has no other
functions. The panel appears to have done its work competently, given the
inherent imprecision in estimation methods. At the same time, Chile has a
special problem that does not face the United States, in that the government
budget is highly sensitive to the world price of copper. To deal with that
issue, a second expert panel estimates whether the current copper price is
above or below its long-run trend, and the annual budget target is adjusted appropriately.
In addition to having a workable target (structural balance)
and institutions to implement it (the independent commissions), Chile has
another crucial element of sound fiscal policy: the necessary political will to
make the institutions work. In a forthcoming
paper, Jeffrey
Frankel of Harvard provides an example to illustrate the commitment.
In 2008, the world price of copper hit an all-time high and at the same time,
the popularity of President Michele Bachelet hit a low of 39 percent. The
reason was simple: people wanted her to spend the income pouring into the
country from commodity exports. She refused. A year later her policy was
vindicated. The global recession had arrived and copper prices had crashed.
However, funds saved during good times provided the cushion needed to maintain
a steady-as-you go fiscal policy that moderated the downturn. Bachelet's
popularity soared to 78 percent.
What lessons can the United States draw from Chile's
experience? I see three.
First, rules matter. Fiscal policy without rules leads to a
short-sighted, asymmetric policy under which the level of debt ratchets upward
from one business cycle to the next, until it becomes unsustainable.
"Dumb" rules that require an annually balanced budget are procyclical
and would make the economy less, not more stable. A structurally balanced
budget like Chile's is probably the simplest workable rule. Future posts in
this series will explore alternatives that are arguably even better. But the
Chilean rule would be a big improvement over what the United States has
now.
Second, any target must be backed up by institutions. In
particular, forecasts and output gap estimates need to be made by truly
independent agents. The Office of Management and Budget has historically
exhibited an unrealistic bias toward optimism regardless of the party in power.
The Congressional
Budget Office has a better reputation, but it, too, is subject to
unrealistic political constraints in the way it must construct its forecasts.
Perhaps the Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic
Research provides a better model. Something like it might allow the technically
competent and unbiased estimates of the output gap that are an essential input
to a structural balance rule.
Third, no set of rules can do the job without a political
commitment to long-term fiscal sustainability. There is no reason it should
take a catastrophe to bring the needed commitment into being. Attention all
grownups in the room: The time to act is now.
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