Best of the Week
Most Popular
1.Greece Exit, Euro-Zone Collapse, Spain and Portugal Will Follow Within 6 Months - Nadeem_Walayat
2.Anti-Gold Propaganda Push, Gold Cover Clause for Enabling Competing New Currencies - Jim_Willie_CB
3.France and Greece Voters Reject Austerity for Money Printing Inflation Stealth Debt Default - Nadeem_Walayat
4.Q.E.3 IS COMING! Stock Market MAP Analysis Part 4 - 9Marc_Horn
5.Governing Elite Fraud and Theft Will Continue Until Morale Improves - James_Quinn
6.Is the World coming to an End? Stock Market MAP Waves Theory Explained, Part 3 - Marc_Horn
7.Gold Bull Market Climaxes - Zeal_LLC
8.Stock Market 'Sell in May, and Go Away,' Strikes Again - Gary_Dorsch
9.Facebook Will Always Be #2 To Google: That’s Why It’s Worth $30 Billion Not $100 Billion - Andrew_Butter
10.Global Debt Crisis, There Is Not Enough Money On Planet Earth - Ashvin_Pandurangi
Last 5 Days Analysis
How a Simple Line Can Improve Your Trading Success - 21st May 12
Stock, Forex and Commodity Markets Analysis and Trading Charts Setups - 21st May 12
FTSE - A rose between two thorns - MAP Analysis - 21st May 12
Full-Fledged European Bank Run Underway; Monetarist Fools are Everywhere; Believe in Gold - 21st May 12
The Pacific Ocean Is Dying: Special Report On Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe - 21st May 12
Stock Market Interim Rally Directly Ahead - 21st May 12
Are Homo Sapiens an Endangered Species? - 21st May 12
Are You Ready for Market Mayhem? - 21st May 12
Global Stock Markets Outlook Ahead - 21st May 12
Stock Market Dam Has Broken, As Massive Divergences End - 21st May 12
Gold Triple Bottom and Stocks Oversold – Now What? - 21st May 12
Dr. Frankenstein's Europe, No Easy Greece Exit, Bank Runs - 21st May 12
Stock Market Downtrend May be Ending Soon - 20th May 12
Looming Reversal of Centralization as Empires Disintegrate - 20th May 12
Phlogging Phlogiston: The Real Origins Of Global Warming Hysteria - 20th May 12
Small Cap Gold Resources Investing, An Extraordinary Time to Be in the Driver's Seat - 20th May 12
Economic Recovery Is an Illusion When Adjusted or Inflation - 20th May 12
Two Culprits in the Oil Demand-Pricing Disconnect - 20th May 12
Destroy Greece to Save the Euro as Merkel Makes 'Growth Proposals' Whilst Asking for Referendum on Euro - 20th May 12
Gold Bottom is In, But is it September 2008 or October 2008? - 19th May 12
Elites Deterrence is Dead - 19th May 12
Understanding JPM's Blunder That Cost It $2bn & Counting - 19th May 12
Is Major Decline in Gold and Silver Stocks Underway? - 19th May 12
Renewable and Non-renewable Resources Investing, An Argument for a Contrarian Investment - 19th May 12
Gold Stock Capitulation - 19th May 12
This is the Gold Price Bottom - 18th May 12
A Different Approach to Trading Apple Stock Using Options - 18th May 12
The Five Best Solar Power Stocks - 18th May 12
Why Investors Think Twice About Facebook - 18th May 12
Eurozone Greek Tragedy Turns Into a Farce as Grexit Looms Large - 18th May 12
Whales in the Gold Market - 18th May 12
Gold and Commodities Forming Major Long-Term Bottoms - 18th May 12
Facebook IPO May Break the Stock Market and Initiate a Free Fall Crash - 18th May 12
Fear stalks the Financial Markets - 18th May 12
Greece: Dump the EU Now For An Economic Recovery! - 18th May 12
We Need A Media War On All Fronts - 18th May 12
Forget Peak Oil, Time To Worry About Peak Oil Labor - 18th May 12
Will the Fed and the ECB Put in Place New Financial Accommodation? - 18th May 12
Blue-Chip Dividend Growth Stocks Are Today’s Strong Option For Retirement Portfolios - 18th May 12
Gold and Silver Market Manipulation? - 17th May 12
Global Implications Of French Presidential Election - 17th May 12
When Will The Flight Out Of Euros Benefit Gold and Silver Prices? - 17th May 12
Apple "Store Within a Store" Bold But Risky Strategy - 17th May 12
Facebook IPO Facts - The Good, The Bad and The Ugly - 17th May 12
Demystifying Global Warming - 17th May 12
Get Ready for Another 2008-Style Financial Crisis - 17th May 12
Economic Recovery Via Shared Sacrifice, Cutting Government Spending, Deficit and Debts - 17th May 12
Gold, I Forget What You Did Last Summer - 17th May 12

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Stock Market Short-term Forecasts - Free Access

Beyond Economic Stimulus, Fiscal Policy After the Great Recession

Economics / Economic Recovery Feb 03, 2010 - 02:54 AM

By: Global_Research

Economics

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleAndrew Jackson writes: As the communiqué from the Pittsburgh G20 summit put it, “it worked”. Unprecedented macro-economic stimulus in the form of ultra low interest rates and large government deficits has pulled the global economy back from the abyss, at least for now. But what comes next? Conventional economic wisdom is setting the stage for deep and damaging cuts to public expenditures if labour and the progressive left do not win the argument for public investment led growth and increased fiscal capacity.


Now is definitely not the time for a quick return to budget balance. Not only is the recovery very fragile, interest rates are likely to remain low. This means we can finance public expenditures which create jobs now while raising our productive potential and the future tax base. Debt incurred today to create a larger economy tomorrow is no burden on future generations.

The IMF, the OECD and most governments accept that stimulus should continue a bit longer while awaiting convincing evidence of a sustained revival of private sector demand. But spending cuts are clearly on the agenda. Citing the need to stabilize public debt in the context of rapidly ageing societies, the International Monetary Fund recently (November 3, 2009) painted a grim fiscal outlook for the advanced industrial countries, calculating that the primary budget balance (the surplus of revenues over program expenditures) will have to be increased by a hefty 8 percentage points of GDP from 2010 levels to bring government debt down to a tolerable 60% of GDP by 2030. The conventional view is that this move back to balanced budgets will have to come much more from deep cuts to public spending than from tax increases.

The dominant view is that both fiscal and monetary policy should tighten over what already promises to be a very sluggish recovery. That is a pretty dismal prospect. It translates into continued very high unemployment and substantial slack in the economy. Operating below capacity means low levels of public and private investment, which in turn lowers the potential for future growth. In human terms, an economy bumping along bottom means no jobs for young people, rising inequality and rising poverty. Moreover, fiscal retrenchment will translate into an unwelcome combination of public sector job cuts, cuts to public services and cuts to income support programs, all of which are central to the well-being of working people.

Workers face the imminent prospect of paying for the economic crisis twice, first in the form of job and wage losses, and second in the form of cuts to the already inadequate public services and social programs which existed in most countries before the recession.

While interest rates should remain low, there are major problems with any combination of fiscal austerity and loose monetary policy. Ultra low interest rates and major injections of liquidity into the banking system are already fuelling new financial asset price bubbles. Led by major institutional investors, the shift back into equities and other assets has got well ahead of any recovery in the real economy. Meanwhile, low interest rates alone will not revive private sector demand. In most advanced industrial countries, especially the US, the UK and Canada, households are already deep in debt. Because of global over-capacity and unbalanced trade with Asia, real private sector investment in the advanced industrial countries is likely to remain very depressed.  Thus fiscal austerity combined with monetary ease will not fix the underlying problem of stagnation.

One way out of this problem is to more closely control the credit process.  We could and should be limiting highly leveraged financial investments and controlling unsustainable credit flows. The other way out of the problem is to run productive fiscal deficits to ensure that the impact of low interest rates is felt through higher public investment. It is desirable that the overall credit creation process should be driven by investment rather than by speculation and debt financed consumption and, under today’s circumstances, this requires high levels of public investment.

Now is the time to launch major medium and long term public investments to drive job creation, and also to create new investment opportunities for industrial sectors which remain in deep crisis. We must address long-standing investment deficits in basic municipal infrastructure; build new urban and inter city transportation systems; invest in energy conservation; dramatically expand non-carbon based energy sources; expand basic public services such as not-for-profit child care and elder care; and invest much more in public education at all levels as well as in workers’ skills.

Well selected investments can yield very high rates of return on a number of fronts. For example, investment in transit and passenger rail can have large positive job impacts, significantly cut carbon emissions, and also generate high rates of return to individuals and businesses in terms of reduced travel time and reduced road congestion. We know that all of these investments – especially those in public services and energy efficiency – are labour intensive and create many more jobs than increased consumer spending, and simultaneously promote our environmental, community development and social justice goals.

What we need is a period of public investment led growth to drive the whole economy. Good public infrastructure and good public services are key drivers of private sector productivity. Public sector investments drive investment by private sector suppliers, especially if twinned to coherent industrial strategies. The key point is that deficits can and should be incurred so long as they are twinned to public investment programs which can be demonstrably linked to increasing overall economic potential and to furthering environmental and social goals. The challenge for labour and the left is to move from talking about temporary “stimulus” to promoting a pro active, longer term public investment agenda.

But how are we going to pay for major new public investments when deficits and debts are, supposedly, already too high? In the short-term, low interest rates make viable a huge raft of potential public and environmental investments which will more than pay for themselves over time. In the longer term, a decade and more of expensive and wasteful tax cuts mainly in favour of corporations and those with very high incomes means that there is ample room to increase government fiscal capacity to balance budgets without cutting spending, and without undermining the living standards of working people.

Labour and the left have to recognize that decent levels of public services and social programs ultimately have to be paid for from a high, comprehensive and fairly flat tax base including consumption and payroll taxes. If we want Scandinavian type welfare states, we will have to pay Scandinavian level taxes as a share of GDP. This reality is often ignored at our peril. In low tax countries like Canada, the US and the UK, we have to make the argument that we are all better off if we enhance fiscal capacity by raising money from a comprehensive tax system, and spending the proceeds on a broad array of equalizing public services and social programs. We have to make the case for a shift from private consumption to public services and public investment, rather than pretend we can deficit finance permanent increments to the social wage.

To be sure, we also need to enhance the progressive elements of the overall tax system. We could and should gain useful amounts of revenue by levying higher rates of income tax on the very affluent. True, the rich are few in numbers, but they do have a high and rising share of personal income in most countries. This should be reduced by raising their taxes and redistributing the proceeds as equalizing transfers. Corporations could also pay more, though there is a case for redirecting higher corporate tax revenues into more effective ways of supporting real economy private investment rather than into general revenues. The G20 agenda should include co-ordinated upward harmonization of taxes on all forms of capital and on high incomes, as well as a financial transactions tax which would hit unproductive but highly profitable financial sector hyper-activity.

To conclude, we will soon be entering a major debate in most countries over the pros and cons of fiscal austerity. The right will argue that we need to cut quickly and deeply in the name of future generations. Our argument has to go beyond the need for temporary “stimulus”. We must call for a deliberate strategy of public investment led growth, and the gradual enhancement of fiscal capacity to pay for a more equal society.

Download this article as pdf

Andrew Jackson is Chief Economist and National Director of Social and Economic Policy with the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), where he has worked since 1989. He is also a Research Professor in the Institute of Political Economy at Carleton University, a Research Associate with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, and a Fellow with the School of Policy Studies at Queen’s University. He has written numerous articles for popular and academic publications, and is the author of Work and Labour in Canada: Critical Issues, published by Canadian Scholars Press (2005).

Global Research Articles by Andrew Jackson

© Copyright Andrew Jackson , Global Research, 2010

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Centre for Research on Globalization. The contents of this article are of sole responsibility of the author(s). The Centre for Research on Globalization will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements contained in this article.


© 2005-2012 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




Commenting Issue - If on submitting you are returned to the main Index Page (50% chance) then your comment has not been accepted, Follow below steps for 95% chance of comment being accepted.

  1. Click your browser Back button (from main index page).
  2. COPY your comment text from Comment box (i.e. copy to clipboard).
  3. Press PAGE Refresh - You should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation"
  4. Paste your comment back into the comment text box.
  5. Click Submit - If everything goes okay you will remain on the article page with the message "Your comment was held for moderation and will be reviewed shortly".
  6. If instead you are again returned to the main index page then repeat 1-5, alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book