90 likes | 277 Views
Beyond Nostalgia Past, Present, and Future of the German and Nordic Models. 6 September 2010 Prof. Dr. Henrik Enderlein Hertie School of Governance. German long-term growth. The old Germany success model. „Semi- Sovereign State“ Peter Katzenstein,1987
E N D
Beyond Nostalgia Past, Present, and Future of the German and Nordic Models 6 September 2010 Prof. Dr. Henrik Enderlein Hertie School of Governance
The old Germany success model • „Semi-Sovereign State“ Peter Katzenstein,1987 • Federalism, Party System, Parapublic Institutions • Corporatism • Largelyapoliticaldecision-taking • Main featuresoftheold „Deutschland AG“ • In-House training (apprenticeship, highlyspecificskill-sets) • Lifetimejobs (highflexibility in workplace, low wage pressure) • Wage compression, egalitarianoutcomes • Strong companynetworks (long-termcontracting) • House-Bank principleasbasisofcorporatefinance • Roleofthestate: largelyhands-off • Generouswelfarestate – becauseit was not used
The old German Model was highly apolitical • Important interplay between Bundebank and Unions • De jure: Bundesbank guarantees price stability, unions gurantee low unemployment • De facto: Bundesbank stabilized employment since unions stabilized prices • German companies strongly supported the model • Example 1: Daimler under Edzard Reuter • We pay taxes to support the German model • His successor Schrempp changed this • Example 2: Corporate Governance at Siemens • Lifetime employment and company responsibility • The semi-sovereign State as a strength
But the German model has vanished • Deutschland AG disentangledandunderpressure • Corporate networksaregone • Companies dependent on theirmarketvaluation • Capital marketfinancingprogressivelyreplacesbankfinancing • Education systemnolongerworks • Apprenticseship-model ill-suitedforjobflexibility • Share of „Abitur“ anduniversityeductionfartoolow • Coordinated wage bargaining still works, but differently • Wage restraint duringthefirstdecadeof EMU • But inequalitiesrisefasterthan in anyother OECD country • State isfinanciallyover-burdened
Cross-shareholdings of German Firms (1996) Höppner/Krempel 2005 Höppner/Krempel 2005
Cross-shareholdings of German Firms 2004 Höppner/Krempel 2005
Deutschland AG disentangledandunderpressure Corporate networksaregone Companies dependent on theirmarketvaluation Capital marketfinancingprogressivelyreplacesbankfinancing Education systemnolongerworks Apprenticseship-model ill-suitedforjobflexibility Share of „Abitur“ anduniversityeductionfartoolow Coordinated wage bargaining still works, but differently Wage restraint duringthefirstdecadeof EMU But inequalitiesrisefasterthan in anyother OECD country State isfinanciallyover-burdened But the German model has vanished
Learn from Nordic models (but: don’t copy-paste) • Don‘tbeafraidofcentralization • Solvethe „joint-decisiontrap“ (Scharpf) • Mainly in eductionandfiscalpolicy • Don‘tbeafraidofhighertaxes • Solvethe German debtproblem • Invest in education • But don‘tforgetthat Germany ispartof EU and EMU • Monetarypolicyisgone • Internal marketisatwork (low-wage sector!) • Tax competitionis real • Thereisno easy „returnofthestate“