200 likes | 551 Views
The role of the public sector in the economy. Topic 1. Contents. Introduction The role of the public sector in the economy 19th century 20th century : The Great Depression The New Deal Public sector reforms since 1980: “ market failures ”
E N D
Contents • Introduction • The role of thepublic sector in theeconomy • 19th century • 20th century: • The Great Depression • The New Deal • Public sector reformssince 1980: “marketfailures” • Theoriesaboutpublic sector growth
Introduction • Reviewthehistory of economicthought in thelast 150 years • Theclassicalperspective: individualist, liberal, laissez-faire 19th century • Thecollectivistperspective: planned, centralized, interventionist, protectionist 20th century • Since 1980 “Statefailures”
Public sector in theeconomy • The public sector is the set of administrative bodies through which the State complies, or enforces, the policy or will expressed in the laws of the country. • Organization in which individuals can collectively achieve goals that are not as easily attainable in other institutions, such as business, family or market (Albi). • Characteristics of the public organization are: -The obligation to be a member of it -Coercion capacity
The 19th century • Hegemony of the classical / liberal perspective -In France, Germany, United States and United Kingdom Theory • Real growth in the medium and long term is obtained through the accumulation of savings and their investment in capital goods and human capital • The role of the State is limited to maintaining the stability of the general price level, administering justice, and promoting social peace.
SP micro-economic policy in the classical perspective • Very limited role for the PS - correct some market failures - externalities, lack of public goods, lack of public education • Principle of neutrality at the microeconomic level - the SP should not distort the “market signals”
SP macro-economic policy in the classical perspective • Maintain the stability of the general price level through: 1-Budget discipline of the public sector. The state should not borrow 2-Gold Standard. Monetary system where a country's currency or paper money has a value directly linked to gold. With the GS, countries agreed to convert paper money into a fixed amount of gold. A country that uses the gold standard sets a fixed price for gold and buys and sells gold at that price.
The Gold Standard • International FinanceInstitution • The main objective - price stability through the control of the amount of money in circulation in the economy • Countries with trade deficits with other countries solved the debt in gold a deflation of prices and wages theoretically improving the competitiveness of exports
The 20th century: thecollectivistperspective • Growth of the PS size, from around 10% of GDP in 1870, to 20% of GDP in 1920, to 28% of GDP in 1960 and to 42% of GDP in 1980. • Philosophy in favor of state intervention in the economy and society • Increased awareness of the failures of the classical perspective - inequality, macroeconomic crisis, lack of social security
The Great Depression: Origins in Prosperity • Credit and debt expansion during the 20s to buy sharesbubbles • Prosperity, butalsoinequality • Among social classes • Amongcountries -> trade balance imbalance • The Bankruptcy of the Wall Street Stock Exchange was the spark, not the cause
Contractive macroeconomic policy during the 1929 depression • The strict budgetary discipline of the time forced the states to reduce public expenditures to balance the public balance -The lack of public spending and social security aggravated the crisis • Central banks kept interest rates high to avoid capital flight and maintain the Gold Standard system -The lack of liquidity in the global financial system caused bankruptcy of commercial banks and also aggravated the crisis • Examples of “pro-cyclical” macroeconomic policies • Finally, the Gold Standard was unsustainable and disappeared at the beginning of the 1930s.
The New Deal • Set of fiscal and monetary interventions in the 1930s and 1940s in the US to overcome the economic crisis: -Counter-cyclical fiscal and monetary policy (increased public spending, reduced taxes and low interest rates during recessions) -Redistribution of income -Creation of social security programs
Production ExpansionPhase Slowdownphase(unemployment) Productionlevelwith full employment Time Counter-cyclicalmacroeconomicpolicy
The 80s: Statefailures • Inefficiency of publiccompanies • Public sector intervention distorts the microeconomic behavior of private companies, workers and consumers markets do not work properly stagnation • Public sector Reforms • Privatizationof publiccompanies • Contractingwithprivatecompanies • Flexibilization of theemployentcontract • Lessregulation
Supply-DemandFactors Baumolanalysis
Organization of course • Course can be split into FOUR parts: • 1 How can govt. improve efficiency when private market is inefficient? CH 2 & 3 • 2 What can govt. do if private market outcome is undesirable due to redistributionalconcerns -> CH 4 • Specific public expenditure programs CH 6 & 7 • Specific sources of public sector REVENUE CH 8 & 9