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Les obsessions de la politique budgétaire allemande. Séminaire économie de la mondialisation Achim Truger, IMK in der Hans-Böckler-Stiftung. Tax cuts and budget consolidation The two fatal obsessions of German fiscal policy since 1998.
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Les obsessions de la politique budgétaire allemande Séminaire économie de la mondialisation Achim Truger, IMK in der Hans-Böckler-Stiftung
Tax cuts and budget consolidationThe two fatal obsessions of German fiscal policy since 1998 Séminaire économie de la mondialisation, OFCE Paris, 7 December 2009 Achim Truger, IMK in der Hans-Böckler-Stiftung
Aims of the presentation • Inform you about German fiscal policy and its economic and social effects including recent developments • Give you an insight into the – often very strange – debate on fiscal policy in Germany • Identify the two main driving forces („obsessions“) of German fiscal policy: tax cuts + budget consolidation
Contents • Introduction • Germany‘s poor economic and social performance over the last 10 years • Red-green tax reforms (1998-2005) and their consequences • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition I (2005 to 2008) – some lessons learned? • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition II (2008 to 2009) – a return to Keynesian fiscal policy? • Fiscal Policy under the new conservative-liberal government: Debt brake and aggressive further tax cuts
Contents • Introduction • Germany‘s poor economic and social performance over the last 10 years • Red-green tax reforms (1998-2005) and their consequences • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition I (2005 to 2008) – some lessons learned? • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition II (2008 to 2009) – a return to Keynesian fiscal policy? • Fiscal Policy under the new conservative-liberal government: Debt brake and aggressive further tax cuts
Annual GDP-growth in % Source: EU-Commission (2009) Source: EU-Commission (2009)
Total government expenditure (% of GDP) Source: EU-Commission (2009)
(almost) world champion in expenditure restraint! Source: EU-Commission (2009)
Government employment (% of total employment) Source: ILO Source: ILO
Massive dismantling of the welfare state • pension cuts while at the same time subsidising private saving („Riester-Rente“) • cuts in unemployment benefits and duration („Hartz IV“), stricter enforcement • cuts in public health insurance • deregulation in employment protection and labour market laws • large-scale privatisations
Unintended, but nevertheless bad • most of the decline occured under the red-green government • it was unintended, because the aims and hopes were to boost growth and emloyment and fight inequality • it resulted from deficiencies in (macro-)economic thinking in Germany • macroeconomics is irrelevant. Keynesianism is refuted and has to be fought against • structural reform is all that is needed to fight unemployment and small government to boost growth
Unintended, but nevertheless bad The two „obsessions“: • growth policy is equated with tax cuts • fiscal policy is equated with budget consolidationmacroeconomic side effects are ignored
Contents • Introduction • Germany‘s poor economic and social performance over the last 10 years • Red-green tax reforms (1998-2005) and their consequences • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition I (2005 to 2008) – some lessons learned? • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition II (2008 to 2009) – a return to Keynesian fiscal policy? • Fiscal Policy under the new conservative-liberal government: Debt brake and aggressive further tax cuts?
Red Green Tax Cuts • Income Tax: in three major steps (2001, 2004 and 2005) marginal tax rates were substantially lowered • Business Taxation: In 2001 a major transition to a new system occured. The maximum marginal rate for profits decreased from 51.8 % to 38.6 % for corporations and 54.5 % to 45.7 % for non-incorporated business • Family taxation: child benefits / tax free allowances were increased • Ecological Tax Reform (almost revenue neutral)
Income Tax schedule: Marginal and average rates 1998 and 2005 in %
Expensive reforms… Revenue effects of income, business and family tax reformin Bill. Euro as compared to 1998 tax law
..but the opposition has a brillant idea: More tax cuts !
Revenue Effects of Tax Reform Proposals made in 2003 to 2005according to different estimates in Bill. Euro in 2005 ..but the opposition has a brillant idea: More tax cuts !!!
Contents • Introduction • Germany‘s poor economic and social performance over the last 10 years • Red-green tax reforms (1998-2005) and their consequences • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition I (2005 to 2008) – some lessons learned? • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition II (2008 to 2009) – a return to Keynesian fiscal policy? • Fiscal Policy under the new conservative-liberal government: Debt brake and aggressive further tax cuts
The Grand Coalition after 2005:some lessons learned… • recognised that further tax cuts were not possible if the budget was to be consolidated • switched to a more revenue sided consolidation strategy • Raised the value added tax by 3 points • Decided to postpone the tougher steps to 2007 and hope that by then the recovery would be strong enough • After the recovery expenditure growth on all federal levels was normalised
… with some serious drawbacks… • Given that nobody knew if the recovery was under way the negative fiscal stance for 2007 was extremely risky • the distributional effects of the tax measures were negative as there was only a compensation of 2/3 by lower contributions to unemployment insurance (from 6.5 to 4.2 %) and other social contributions were slightly increased • (by the way not very nice further move into the mercantilist direction…)
… with some serious drawbacks… • Public revenue was weakend from 2008 on by the next „big“ business tax reform (maximum statuatory rate down to 29.8 percent for all business profits) • Revenue of the unemployment insurance, the federal labour agency, was weakend by further aggressive cuts in the contribution rates: from 4.2 % to 3.3 % in 2008 and then to 2.8 % in 2009 the agency is deeply in deficit now and calls for expenditure cuts have been around…
Contents • Introduction • Germany‘s poor economic and social performance over the last 10 years • Red-green tax reforms (1998-2005) and their consequences • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition I (2005 to 2008) – some lessons learned? • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition II (2008 to 2009) – a return to Keynesian fiscal policy? • Fiscal Policy under the new conservative-liberal government: Debt brake and aggressive further tax cuts
After some hesitation until November 2008: a tiny stimulus package…
Unbelievable: conscious counter-cyclical action is back after 25 years…
Not that bad in international comparison Source: OECD (2009)
Not that bad in international comparison Source: OECD (2009)
Not that bad in international comparison Source: OECD (2009)
But no change of the general paradigm Fiscal Policy: • important improvement compared with last recession • overall reaction slightly better than EMU-average • but again weaker than in the U.S. • and certainly not enough to counter the recession • German government prevented international co-ordination
But no change of the general paradigmThe serious drawbacks: • (Business as usual with respect to wages and monetary policy) • Tax cuts in the stimulus packages are permanent and will permanently weaken public revenue by about 1 percent of GDP • terrible medium term drawback: the „debt brake“ which will be gradually phased in from 2011 onwards
The „debt brake“ • ‚structural‘ deficit < 0,35 % of GDP • Federal level 0.35 % ceiling from 2016 • „Länder“ 0.0 % from 2020 • cyclical deficit according to cyclical adjustment method by EU-Commission • discretionary policy only allowed in very special circumstances • transition period from 2011 to 2016/2020 when ‚structural‘ deficits have to meet the target
The „debt brake“: errors in construction… • relies almost completely on built-in stabilisers • but built-in stabilisers will be counteracted because cyclical deficit will be calculated according to technocratical cyclical adjustment method by EU-Commission serious procyclicalities • transition period from 2011 to 2016/2020 when ‚structural‘ deficits have to meet the target very dangerous
Dangerous transition to the „debt brake“ • German fiscal policy will switch to restriction in 2011 irrespective of the economic situation • This may be to early for the recovery • (and it will certainly be wrong if European and global economic imbalances are to be tackled) • If there are no tax increases (which almost everybody has ruled out…) then expenditure restraint will have to be brutal again: nominal total expenditure growth not much higher than 1%
Dangerous transition to the „debt brake“ • with good luck due to the endogeneity of „structural deficits“ prospects may brighten substantially if the recovery comes soon, is strong and lasts some years • With bad luck due to the endogeneity of „structural deficits“ prospects may darken even more if the recovery is weak and a period of stagnation follows • In the second case: If governments react with even more fiscal restriction to meet the then more ambitious deficit ceiling in 2016/20 then a viciuos circle might occur
Contents • Introduction • Germany‘s poor economic and social performance over the last 10 years • Red-green tax reforms (1998-2005) and their consequences • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition I (2005 to 2008) – some lessons learned? • Fiscal Policy under the Grand Coalition II (2008 to 2009) – a return to Keynesian fiscal policy? • Fiscal Policy under the new conservative-liberal government: Debt brake and aggressive further tax cuts
Believe it or not… In this situation the new government announces • an immediate growth acceleration programme = further permanent tax cuts of about 8.5 bn. Euros.. • Half of it goes into higher child benefits/allowances • 2 bn go into lower business taxation • 0.5 bn. to lower inheritance taxes • 1 bn. to reduced vat rate for hotels IMK estimate of one-off growth effect: 0.2 % of GDP