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The Public Finances and the Pacto Fiscal: Comments Adrienne Cheasty Senior Advisor, Fiscal Affairs Department International Monetary Fund CEPAL 20 th Regional Seminar on Fiscal Policy Santiago de Chile January 28-31, 2008
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The Public Finances and the Pacto Fiscal: Comments Adrienne Cheasty Senior Advisor, Fiscal Affairs Department International Monetary Fund CEPAL 20th Regional Seminar on Fiscal Policy Santiago de Chile January 28-31, 2008 The views expressed herein are those of the author and should not be attributed to the IMF, its Executive Board, or its management
Thank you, CEPAL • Latin America is in better fiscal shape than considered possible 20 years ago • Some of the credit must go to CEPAL, and to this seminar, for its success in: • raising awareness of fiscal issues • becoming a focal point for policymakers and academics to develop their thinking on them • influencing fiscal strategies by clear-minded thematic agendas and publications
However, the Agenda of the Fiscal Pact remains valid • Consolidate the ongoing fiscal adjustment • Raise the productivity of public spending • Make fiscal activities more transparent • Promote equity • Support the development of democratic institutions
Consolidate the ongoing fiscal adjustment (1) • The good fiscal performance may not be robust to an unfavorable international environment • More than half the variation in Latin American GDP can be explained by external shocks (Osterholm and Zettelmeyer, 2007)
Consolidate the ongoing fiscal adjustment (2) • Some aspects of the fiscal environment will be different in the coming 20 years. • Easier access to market financing • Redemption from original sin? • More capital flows
New: easier access to market financing • More fiscal discipline, or less? • The less the financing constraint, the greater the possibility for counter-cyclical fiscal policy • Fiscal multipliers may be different • Crowding out via the interest rate channel is reduced as capital mobility increases • Switching from captive sources of financing may mean domestic interest rates become more sensitive to fiscal policy • Trade openness reduces fiscal multipliers (but not by much) • Households with better access to credit may become more Ricardian—offsetting a fiscal contraction by increasing borrowing
A shift towards domestic debt—because of improvements in terms...
... imply improved debt composition and less risk, so debt tolerance has increased But: • Need to maintain a balance between local and foreign currency debt, to reduce temptation to inflate away local debt—and to establish borrowing benchmarks • Ensure government borrowing from the banking system does not lead to inefficiencies and delayed development of domestic capital markets • Will original sin return if global credit tightens?
New:more capital flows • Fiscal tightening is not always appropriate • As a response to inflows when the external current account is in surplus • As a response to outflows with non-fiscal causes and consequences • But it very often is appropriate • Need to ‘pre-position’ fiscal policy, to give it market credibility, and the flexibility needed to confront the new sources of volatility associated with financial globalization
Raise productivity of public spending Pre-positioning largely means savings on the spending side, as revenue is decelerating along with growth • Key pending fiscal reform: tackle budget rigidities/revenue earmarking • To close the infrastructure gap, make public investment more efficient rather than cutting it • Remove unintended constraints on high-return investment by well-run public enterprises
Raise productivity of public spending (example) • Remove unintended constraints on high-return investment by well-run public enterprises • Criteria for permitting low-risk public enterprises to be excluded from fiscal targets (managerial independence, governance, financial sustainability, etc.) • The criteria create a roadmap for public enterprise reform and reduction of an important category of fiscal risk
Make fiscal activities more transparent • Emphasis on transparency is a key innovation of the last two decades ... But still a frontier • Standards and codes (mainstreaming ROSCs/EITI) • Comprehensive oversight and monitoring • Public enterprises • Public-private partnerships • Guarantees • Other contingent liabilities
Promote equity • Fewer gains here, and more at stake • CEPAL’s tax project • Must fiscal termites win? • An effective PIT • Better compliance
Develop democratic institutions • Fiscal advances: transparency, FRLs – not enough to be democratic, but also need to be responsible. • We have learned how to make FRLs better • Transparency and accountability • Broad coverage • Procedural rules are more durable than numerical • If the rule has to be numerical, follow best-practice • Effective enforcement mechanisms • Integration with public finance legislation