The Dangers of Deficit Reduction
Joseph E. Stiglitz
NEW YORK – A wave of fiscal austerity is rushing over Europe and America. The magnitude of budget deficits – like the magnitude of the downturn – has taken many by surprise. But despite protests by the yesterday’s proponents of deregulation, who would like the government to remain passive, most economists believe that government spending has made a difference, helping to avert another Great Depression.
Most economists also agree that it is a mistake to look at only one side of a balance sheet (whether for the public or private sector). One has to look not only at what a country or firm owes, but also at its assets. This should help answer those financial sector hawks who are raising alarms about government spending. After all, even deficit hawks acknowledge that we should be focusing not on today’s deficit, but on the long-term national debt. Spending, especially on investments in education, technology, and infrastructure, can actually lead to lower long-term deficits. Banks’ short-sightedness helped create the crisis; we cannot let government short-sightedness – prodded by the financial sector – prolong it.
Faster growth and returns on public investment yield higher tax revenues, and a 5 to 6% return is more than enough to offset temporary increases in the national debt. A social cost-benefit analysis (taking into account impacts other than on the budget) makes such expenditures, even when debt-financed, even more attractive.
Finally, most economists agree that, apart from these considerations, the appropriate size of a deficit depends in part on the state of the economy. A weaker economy calls for a larger deficit, and the appropriate size of the deficit in the face of a recession depends on the precise circumstances.
It is here that economists disagree. Forecasting is always difficult, but especially so in troubled times. What has happened is (fortunately) not an everyday occurrence; it would be foolish to look at past recoveries to predict this one.
In America, for instance, bad debt and foreclosures are at levels not seen for three-quarters of a century; the decline in credit in 2009 was the largest since 1942. Comparisons to the Great Depression are also deceptive, because the economy today is so different in so many ways. And nearly all so-called experts have proven highly fallible – witness the United States Federal Reserve’s dismal forecasting record before the crisis.
Yet, even with large deficits, economic growth in the US and Europe is anemic, and forecasts of private-sector growth suggest that in the absence of continued government support, there is risk of continued stagnation – of growth too weak to return unemployment to normal levels anytime soon.
The risks are asymmetric: if these forecasts are wrong, and there is a more robust recovery, then, of course, expenditures can be cut back and/or taxes increased. But if these forecasts are right, then a premature “exit” from deficit spending risks pushing the economy back into recession. This is one of the lessons we should have learned from America’s experience in the Great Depression; it is also one of the lessons to emerge from Japan’s experience in the late 1990’s.
These points are particularly germane for the hardest-hit economies. The United Kingdom, for example, has had a harder time than other countries for an obvious reason: it had a real-estate bubble (though of less consequence than in Spain), and finance, which was at the epicenter of the crisis, played a more important role in its economy than it does in other countries.
The UK’s weaker performance is not the result of worse policies; indeed, compared to the US, its bank bailouts and labor-market policies were, in many ways, far better. It avoided the massive waste of human resources associated with high unemployment in America, where almost one out of five people who would like a full-time job cannot find one.
As the global economy returns to growth, governments should, of course, have plans on the drawing board to raise taxes and cut expenditures. The right balance will inevitably be a subject of dispute. Principles like “it is better to tax bad things than good things” might suggest imposing environmental taxes.
The financial sector has imposed huge externalities on the rest of society. America’s financial industry polluted the world with toxic mortgages, and, in line with the well established “polluter pays” principle, taxes should be imposed on it. Besides, well-designed taxes on the financial sector might help alleviate problems caused by excessive leverage and banks that are too big to fail. Taxes on speculative activity might encourage banks to focus greater attention on performing their key societal role of providing credit.
Over the longer term, most economists agree that governments, especially in advanced industrial countries with aging populations, should be concerned about the sustainability of their policies. But we must be wary of deficit fetishism. Deficits to finance wars or give-aways to the financial sector (as happened on a massive scale in the US) lead to liabilities without corresponding assets, imposing a burden on future generations. But high-return public investments that more than pay for themselves can actually improve the well-being of future generations, and it would be doubly foolish to burden them with debts from unproductive spending and then cut back on productive investments.
These are questions for a later day – at least in many countries, prospects of a robust recovery are, at best, a year or two away. For now, the economics is clear: reducing government spending is a risk not worth taking.
Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor at Columbia University and recipient of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Economics. His most recent book Freefall: Free Markets and the Sinking of the Global Economy is available in French (Le Triomphe De La Cupidité, Liens Qui Liberent) and will be available shortly in Japanese, Spanish, German, and Italian.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2010.
www.project-syndicate.org
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ytrottier 06:49 06 Mar 10
Energy conservation measures, such as insulating houses and commercial buildings, installing geothermal heat pumps, and building national supergrids, can easily provide more than 6% return on investment, while simultaneously helping the environment, energy security, and employment. This should be a priority for government spending.
dannyb2b 03:15 07 Mar 10
Spending and in turn agregate demand can be increased without increasing the debt burden of either the government or the private sector.
New money should be created without it being recognised as debt. Central banks should conduct monetary policy directly with the public. Instead of a handful of major financial institutions dealing with the central bank the system should be adapted so that all adult citizens have an account with the central bank. For example if aggregate demand is insufficient a requisite expansion of the money supply (taking into account inflationary considerations) would be credited into citizens accounts. This would bypass liquidity traps and curtail the excessive financial power due to access to easy funds the major financial players experience. As a result excessive destabilising derivative markets or inflated housing sectors through excessive debt wouldnt emerge as the large banking organisations would have to obtain financing from the public who would be weary of losing their capital investing in institutions engaging in questionable practises.
On the other hand inflationary pressures could be mopped up through a targeted consumption tax designed to remove excessive liquidity out of circulation.
vicric 05:43 09 Mar 10
Wise up Prof. Stiglitz, you can not seriously recommend more deficits unless you want to get to the same fates as Greece and California. The markets will trump your nostrums about long term sustainability and assets. You wrote so extensively about the recent financial crisis, and never learned its most crucial lessons?
vicric 05:44 09 Mar 10
Wise up Prof. Stiglitz, you can not seriously recommend more deficits unless you want to get to the same fates as Greece and California. The markets will trump your nostrums about long term sustainability and assets. You wrote so extensively about the recent financial crisis, and never learned its most crucial lessons?
Aragorn 11:31 30 Apr 10
I'm afraid that actually there would never be a chance for any government to step out again, since what they have done to save the world from another recession, is just like applying steroid to boost up the conditions. Once the money is taken away from the market, no matter how slow it is (at the same time I doubt that whether the governments can afford to do it slowly), the recession will come back, more severely. Another interesting point is, for democratic society, whether cutting budget is really possible or not. It seems more a political problem than an economic one. When Prime Ministers/Presidents are elected, can they really go for the unpopular choices? Greece is a good example now, and Japan's recent Prime Ministers rarely stay for more than a year. And when the problem gets too serious, like Greece, maybe also Japan, will the cut on public spending leads to incurable harms to the economy? Maybe the only way to solve the problem is, all the developed countries have a meeting and write off their debts together?
vicric 01:50 30 Apr 10
Prof. Stiglitz says one should also look at the balance sheet and still follows up with more economic gobbledygook. That is hardly new, what he should have commented on instead was the potential for destabliizing caused by the maturity and risk mismatching between such assets and the funding. That was the lesson of this crisis, not to mention the liquidity drain that followed when vital segments of the credit markets (REPO) seized up. But even more crucial is the dynamic link between deficits and incentives on the part of the private sector, caused by large public sector control over the economy. These, Prof. Stiglitz are not in your economic models. When are you and folks like Krugman ever start to learn how irrelevant your economic concepts are to reality as we see it in the ground?


alexferro 01:30 06 Mar 10
At tmmes it seems the deficit hawks are just tryng to panic tales of hyper inflation.