Is austerity – particularly the fiscal consolidation programmes currently under way in most European Union countries - self-defeating? This question has been thrown into sharp focus by the IMF’s belated reassessment of the magnitude of the “fiscal multiplier” in major industrialised countries during the Great Recession. New research from NIESR, published in the National Institute Economic Review (£), makes the first attempt – to our knowledge – to model the quantitative impact of coordinated fiscal consolidation across the EU, using the National Institute Global Econometric Model.
Wednesday, 31 October 2012
Wednesday, 24 October 2012
Tomorrow's growth statistics today?
Did David Cameron's comments at Prime Minister's Questions - "the good news will keep on coming" - today move the sterling exchange rate? The first estimate of UK GDP in the third quarter of 2012 will be released tomorrow, and he will have seen it this morning; not surprisingly, his remarks have therefore been interpreted as signalling that the numbers will be good. For example, Nick Robinson said: "The PM was giving a strong hint that tomorrow's GDP figures will be positive".
How did we get into this mess and what can we do about it?
The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) asked me (as well as others) to record a brief video on the origins of, and potential policy responses to, the UK's current economic problems. The video, which lasts about 7 minutes, can be seen here. Obviously, the views expressed are my responsibility and mine alone, not that of the Department or government.
Tuesday, 23 October 2012
Talking tough (but intelligent) on crime
New research,
undertaken for the Ministry of Justice by Helen Bewley at NIESR, shows that increasing the punitive
element of community orders, as proposed yesterday by the Prime Minister, has
the potential to reduce re-offending. But there are potential pitfalls: reform
needs to be cautious and based on the evidence of what works in reducing
re-offending.
[Helen is one of the leading experts in the complex statistical techniques required to establish the causal connection between particular policy interventions (like community orders) and economic and social outcomes (like reoffending). This post describes the research and its implications for policy, but he techniques and data used here have implications for policy analysis going well beyond this particular topic]
Monday, 22 October 2012
If the confidence fairy ever existed, austerity has frightened her away
Yet more on multipliers; a reply to Chris Giles. Professor Richard Portes (President, Centre for Economic Policy Research) and me in the Financial Times. NIESR will shortly be publishing detailed research on this issue, estimating multipliers and looking at the impact of coordinated fiscal consolidation in the EU (both the eurozone and the UK): watch this space. Meanwhile, here's our letter:
Friday, 19 October 2012
"We've got the deficit down by a quarter": an update
Figures for the public finances vary a lot from month to month, partly predictably, partly not; and they're invariably revised, often by quite large amounts. Hence, I've resisted updating this July post, which explains that while the government's repeated claims that "we've got the deficit down by a quarter" are true if you compare 2011-12 with 2009-10, this was mostly achieved simply by cutting public investment. But now seems a good time to do so, since today's public finance figures mark the half way point of the financial year, and - in contrast to recent months - the figures are not nearly as bad as expected, with revisions meaning that the first half of the year now looks significantly better.
Nevertheless, there still isn't really much point in looking at month to month numbers; but the big picture is clear. Here's the total deficit (public sector net borrowing, excluding the purely financial transactions that distorted public investment in April 2012) and the deficit on the current budget, calculated on a rolling 12-month basis to eliminate seasonality as far as possible.
Nevertheless, there still isn't really much point in looking at month to month numbers; but the big picture is clear. Here's the total deficit (public sector net borrowing, excluding the purely financial transactions that distorted public investment in April 2012) and the deficit on the current budget, calculated on a rolling 12-month basis to eliminate seasonality as far as possible.
Tuesday, 16 October 2012
The austerity debate: Paul Krugman and me vs. Bridget Rosewell and Stephen King
On October 15, I spoke in a debate at the Houses
of Parliament entitled: "Time for a radical rethink? The economics
of deficit reduction".
The debate was organised by Professor Lord Richard Layard, by kind permission of the Speaker and Lord Speaker (who introduced the debate). It was chaired by Evan Davis. I joined Professor Paul Krugman of Princeton University, and Nobel Laureate in Economics, in arguing that premature fiscal consolidation in the UK had been based two key misconceptions: that in the absence of accelerated deficit reduction, bond markets would panic; and that fiscal consolidation would have little or no negative impact on growth. Bridget Rosewell, of Volterra Partners, and Stephen King, Group Chief Economist of HSBC, argued in contrast that austerity was a necessary corrective to the large debt overhang, both public and private, resulting from a financial bubble in the late 2000s and the resulting crisis.
The debate was organised by Professor Lord Richard Layard, by kind permission of the Speaker and Lord Speaker (who introduced the debate). It was chaired by Evan Davis. I joined Professor Paul Krugman of Princeton University, and Nobel Laureate in Economics, in arguing that premature fiscal consolidation in the UK had been based two key misconceptions: that in the absence of accelerated deficit reduction, bond markets would panic; and that fiscal consolidation would have little or no negative impact on growth. Bridget Rosewell, of Volterra Partners, and Stephen King, Group Chief Economist of HSBC, argued in contrast that austerity was a necessary corrective to the large debt overhang, both public and private, resulting from a financial bubble in the late 2000s and the resulting crisis.
A summary of my argument appears in the Spectator here. Excerpts of the debate, and a follow up
discussion between me and Bridget Rosewell, featured on the Today programme [about 15 minutes in] on the morning of 16th October. Here is a nice narrative piece by Russell Lynch in the Evening Standard.
Here is the full recording (audio only) of the debate (it is about 1 hour 45 minutes).
Here is the full recording (audio only) of the debate (it is about 1 hour 45 minutes).
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