Every economic program imposed on
Greece by its creditors since the financial crisis struck in 2009 has been held
together by a central conceit: that structural reforms, conceived boldly and
implemented without slippage, would bring about rapid economic recovery. The
European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary
Fund anticipated that fiscal austerity would be costly to incomes and
employment – though they significantly underestimated just how costly. But they
argued that long-delayed (and much-needed) pro-market reforms would result in a
compensatory boost to the Greek economy.
Any serious assessment of the
actual results produced by structural reforms around the world – particularly
in Latin America and Eastern Europe since 1990 – would have poured cold water
on such expectations. Privatization, deregulation, and liberalization typically
produce growth in the longer term at best, with short-run effects that are
often negative.
It is not that governments cannot
engineer quick growth takeoffs. In fact, such growth accelerations are quite
common around the world. But they are associated with more targeted, selective
removal of key obstacles, rather than broad liberalization and economy-wide
reform efforts.
The theory behind structural
reforms is simple: opening the economy to competition will increase the
efficiency with which resources are allocated. Open up regulated professions –
pharmacies, notaries, and taxicabs, for example – and inefficient suppliers
will be driven out by more productive firms. Privatize state enterprises, and
the new management will rationalize production (and shed all the excess workers
who owe their jobs to political patronage).
These changes do not directly
induce economic growth, but they increase the economy’s potential – or long-run
– income. Growth itself occurs as the economy begins to converge to this higher
level of long-run income.
Many academic studies have found
that the rate of convergence tends to be about 2% per year. That is, each year,
an economy tends to close 2% of the gap between its actual and potential income
levels.
This estimate helps us gauge the
magnitude of growth we can expect from structural reform. Let’s be
hyper-optimistic and suppose that structural reforms enable Greece to double
its potential income over three years – pushing Greek per capita GDP significantly
beyond the European Union average. Applying convergence math, this would
produce an annual growth boost of only about 1.3%, on average, over the next
three years. To place this number in perspective, remember that Greek GDP has
shrunk by 25% since 2009.
So, if structural reforms have
not paid off in Greece, it is not because Greek governments have slacked off.
Greece’s record on implementation is actually pretty good. From 2010 to 2015,
Greece climbed nearly 40 places in the World Banks’s business-environment
rankings. Instead, the current disappointment arises from the very logic of
structural reform: most of the benefits come much later, not when a country
really needs them.
There is an alternative strategy
that could produce significantly more rapid growth. A selective approach that
targets the “binding constraints” – those areas where the growth returns are
the greatest – would maximize early benefits. It would also ensure that the
Greek authorities spend valuable political and human capital on the battles
that really matter.
So, which binding constraints in
the Greek economy should be targeted?
The biggest bang for the reform
buck would be obtained from increasing the profitability of tradables –
spurring investment and entrepreneurship in export activities, both existing
and new. Of course, Greece lacks the most direct instrument for achieving this
– currency depreciation – owing to its eurozone membership. But other
countries’ experience provides a rich inventory of alternative tools for export
promotion – from tax incentives to special zones to targeted infrastructure
projects.
Most urgently, Greece needs to
create an institution close to the prime minister that is tasked with fostering
a dialogue with potential investors. The institution needs the authority to
remove the obstacles it identifies, rather than having its proposals languish
in various ministries. Such obstacles are typically highly specific – a zoning
regulation here, a training program there – and are unlikely to be well targeted
by broad structural reforms.
The absence to date of a
single-minded focus on tradables has been costly. Different reforms have had
conflicting effects on export competitiveness. For example, in manufacturing,
the competitiveness benefits of wage cuts (“internal devaluation”) were offset
by the increases in energy costs resulting from fiscal austerity measures and
price adjustments by state enterprises. A more focused reform strategy could
have protected exporting activities from such adverse effects.
Conventional structural reform
tends to be biased toward “best practices” – policy remedies that are
supposedly universally valid. But, as successful countries around the world
have discovered, a best-practice mindset does not help much in promoting new exports.
Lacking its own currency, the Greek government will have to be especially
creative and imaginative.
In particular, the experience of
other countries suggests that a quick supply response is likely to require
selective, discretionary policies in favor of exporters, rather than the
“horizontal” policies that advocates of conventional structural reform prefer.
Therein lies a paradox: The more orthodox Greece’s macro and fiscal strategy
is, the more heterodox its growth strategy will have to be.
This article is published in collaboration with Project Syndicate. Publication does not imply endorsement of views by the World Economic Forum.
Author: Dani Rodrik is Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario