Fiscal Federalism and European
Economic Integration
The pace of economic integration among European Union (EU) member states
has accelerated considerably over the past decade, highlighted by the process
of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). Many aspects of the EU’s apparatus,
however, have failed to evolve in order to meet these new challenges.
Fiscal Federalism and European Economic Integration explores the issue of fiscal
federalism within the context of EU integration from theoretical, historical,
policy and global perspectives. It contrasts the pace of integration amongst
EU member states with the failure of financial and administrative apparatus
to encompass fiscal federalism, i.e. the development of a centralized budgetary
system.
This impressive collection, with contributions from a range of internationally respected authors, will interest students and researchers involved
with European economics and economic integration. Its accessible style will
also make it extremely useful to policy-makers and professionals for whom
European economic integration is a part of daily life.
Mark Baimbridge is Senior Lecturer in Economics at the University of
Bradford, UK.
Philip Whyman is Reader in Economics at the University of Central Lancashire, UK.
Routledge Studies in the European Economy
1 Growth and Crisis in the Spanish Economy, 1940–1993
Sima Lieberman
2 Work and Employment in Europe
A new convergence?
Edited by Peter Cressey and Bryn Jones
3 Trans-European Telecommunication Networks
The challenges for industrial policy
Colin Turner
4 European Union – European Industrial Relations?
Global challenges, national developments and transnational dynamics
Edited by Wolfgang E. Lecher and Hans-Wolfgang Platzer
5 Governance, Industry and Labour Markets in Britain and France
The modernizing state in the mid-twentieth century
Edited by Noel Whiteside and Robert Salais
6 Labour Market Efficiency in the European Union
Employment protection and fixed-term contracts
Klaus Schömann, Ralf Rogowski and Thomas Kruppe
7 The Enlargement of the European Union
Issues and strategies
Edited by Victoria Curzon-Price, Alice Landau and Richard Whitman
8 European Trade Unions
Change and response
Edited by Mike Rigby, Roger Smith and Teresa Lawlor
9 Fiscal Federalism in the European Union
Edited by Amedeo Fossati and Giorgio Panella
10 European Telecommunications Liberalisation
Edited by Kjell A. Eliassen and Marit Sjøvaag
11 Integration and Transition in Europe
The economic geography of interaction
Edited by George Petrakos, Gunther Maier and Grzegorz Gorzelak
12 SMEs and European Integration
Internationalisation strategies
Birgit Hegge
13 Fiscal Federalism and European Economic Integration
Edited by Mark Baimbridge and Philip Whyman
Fiscal Federalism and
European Economic
Integration
Edited by Mark Baimbridge
and Philip Whyman
First published 2004
by Routledge
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Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
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© 2004 Editorial matter and selection, Mark Baimbridge and
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Contents
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: fiscal federalism and EMU: an appraisal
vii
ix
xi
xiii
xv
1
PHILIP WHYMAN AND MARK BAIMBRIDGE
PART I
Theory of fiscal federalism
11
1
13
An essay on fiscal federalism
WALLACE E. OATES
2
The political economy of EMU and the EU Stability Pact
48
R ALPH ROTTE
PART II
Development of EU budgetary measures
3
The development of EU budgetary measures and the rise
of structural funding
67
69
JEFFREY HARROP
4
The development of the EU Budget and EMU
BRIAN ARDY
83
vi
Contents
PART III
EMU and fiscal federalism
101
5
103
Stabilization in EMU: a critical review
ROBERT ACKRILL
6
Fiscal and monetary policies
119
EDWARD M. GRAMLICH AND PAUL R. WOOD
PART IV
A global perspective
135
7
137
Australia’s federal experience
JEFF PETCHEY AND GRAEME WELLS
8
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland: a public choice approach
155
CHRISTOPH A. SCHALTEGGER AND RENÉ L. FREY
9
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence
in Canada’s currency union: lessons for EMU
172
TRACY R. SNODDON
Index
195
Figures
6.1 Taylor Rule short-term interest rates
8.1 Index of democracy for Switzerland
9.1 Federal revenue share before transfers and federal expenditure
share after transfers
9.2 Income disparities in Canada and the EU15
9.3a Canada: deficit to GDP ratios – high, low and average
provinces
9.3b EU15: deficit to GDP ratios – high, low and average provinces
9.4 Dispersion in general government consumption expenditures
(% of GDP)
125
158
175
182
183
183
189
Tables
2.1 General government budget balances in the EU (net surplus (+)
or net deficit (–) in % of GDP)
2.2 General government budget balances in the EU, excluding
interest (net primary surplus (+) or net primary deficit (–)
in % of GDP)
2.3 Cyclically adjusted general government budget balances in the
EU (net surplus (+) or net deficit (–) in % of GDP)
2.4 General government consolidated gross debt in the EU
(% of GDP)
4.1 EU revenue sources
4.2 National central government total revenue, 1997 (% GDP)
4.3 EU budgetary expenditure
4.4 National central government expenditure by function, 1997
(% GDP)
4.5 Government expenditure by level of government, 1997
(% of nominal GDP)
6.1 Tax rates in EU countries
6.2 Projections in the 2000 stability programmes (% of GDP)
6.3 Correlations between changes in output gaps and changes in
fiscal surpluses
7.1 Changes in revenue and spending powers: Australia (%)
7.2 Sources of tax revenue 1998–99 ($Abn)
7.3 The impact of horizontal fiscal equalization, Australia, 2000–01
8.1 Structure and trend of public revenue in Switzerland, by % of
total revenue
8.2 Revenues of the three levels of government (%)
8.3 Share of federal aid on total cantonal revenue, 1997
8.4 Empirical studies on the impact of federalism on economic
policy in Switzerland
9.1 Federal cash transfers as a percentage of provincial revenue
9.2 Correlations of deviations in provincial unemployment rates
from the national rate, 1966–99
58
59
61
62
86
87
88
88
89
123
128
129
138
141
149
157
159
159
166
176
180
Contributors
Robert Ackrill, Nottingham Trent University, UK.
Brian Ardy, South Bank University, UK.
Mark Baimbridge, University of Bradford, UK.
René L. Frey, University of Basel, Switzerland.
Edward M. Gramlich, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
USA.
Jeffrey Harrop, University of Bradford, UK.
Wallace E. Oates, University of Maryland, USA.
Jeff Petchey, Curtin University of Technology, Australia.
Ralph Rotte, University of the German Armed Forces, Germany and CEPR,
London.
Christoph A. Schaltegger, University of Basel and University of St. Gallen,
Switzerland.
Tracy R. Snoddon, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada.
Graeme Wells, Australian National University, Australia.
Philip Whyman, University of Central Lancashire, UK.
Paul R. Wood, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, USA.
Preface
The number of books available to analyse contemporary European economic
integration have multiplied over recent years to the point where the ‘wood’
and ‘trees’ frequently become inseparable. However, despite this extensive
choice of texts, a number of weaknesses remain. First, many of the leading
texts have sought to maximize their marketability by attempting to cover the
entire spectrum of EU-related topics, but ultimately do so only at a superficial
level. Whilst certain areas may lend themselves to a brief examination
presented in a single chapter, many others are too complex to summarize in
such a manner and require a more sophisticated approach if all the principal
issues are to be analysed. Clearly, we believe that fiscal federalism in the
context of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) is one such topic. Even the
most cursory discussion of fiscal federalism should seek to encompass the
considerable theoretical underpinnings of this area of economic and political
debate, review the historical development of the EU budget, consider how
fiscal federalism does and should feature within the present EMU framework
and what Europe can learn from established federal systems. Such a herculean
task cannot be satisfactorily achieved in a single chapter. Indeed, it has been a
challenge to incorporate the most important aspects in a single book of ten
chapters!
The second problem for those seeking a greater understanding of European
economic integration is that many books are ‘positioned’ and adopt a far from
neutral stance when explaining the relevant arguments. It is, of course, natural
that academics who have self-selected European integration as their speciality,
are likely to possess strong opinions towards the achievement of this goal.
However, too frequently value judgements are permitted to influence the
treatment given to the pertinent issues and arguments. We hope that this book
succeeds in portraying the concept of fiscal federalism in a balanced light.
A third problem is that the fast-moving events of European integration can
result in books becoming outdated soon after, or even before, their publication! Readers should always be aware of the time lag it take for the latest
ideas to be included in texts following their initial publication as working
papers, conference contributions and journal articles. This process can often
take several years, which when added to the time taken to write, edit, print
xiv
Preface
and distribute a book, can make the end product appear dated by the time it
reaches the shelves, real or virtual.
The present edited collection seeks to minimize these problems that all
editors and authors face by bringing together in a single volume a carefully
chosen series of contributions written by leading specialists in the field of
fiscal federalism. The editorial content of the book endeavours to be neutral in
the sense that none of the arguments contained in the volume are presented as
being superior to any other. Moreover, considerable effort has been taken to
ensure that although the subject matter is academically rigorous, the ‘technical’ content is reduced to a minimum, without compromising the quality of
its content, to ensure the highest possible degree of ‘readability’, all too
frequently absent from contemporary economics texts. Thus we hope to have
widened the potential audience for this edited collection beyond academic
economists, to encompass all those in disciplines interested in European integration and students at virtually all levels. Moreover, by limiting its breadth
of analysis to the theoretical, policy-orientated, historical and external
perspectives of fiscal federalism, the volume is able to cover each topic in
sufficient detail to be useful for undergraduate students undertaking courses
in European economics, the political economy of Europe, international finance,
public finance or European studies, together with providing a reference point
for postgraduates and academics.
The book is divided into four sections. The first seeks to establish the
theoretical background to the discussion of fiscal federalism. Contributions in
this section include the ‘founding father’ of fiscal federalism, Wallace Oates,
and a leading specialist, Ralph Rotte. The second section commences with a
chapter by Jeff Harrop which reviews the progress of the EU budget, followed
by Brian Ardy who considers the potential impact of EMU upon existing
budgetary structures. The third section examined moves the story forward
with Robert Ackrill considering whether the absence of the euro-zone members to undertake economic stabilization via fiscal federalism is an important
issue. This is followed by the chapter of Edward Gramlich and Paul Wood
which focuses upon how the shape of the nation, or federation, coexists with
confederation. The final section seeks to widen the frequently introspective
nature of EMU related discussion through incorporating experiences and
lessons from established fiscal federal systems in Australia (Jeff Petchey and
Graeme Wells), Switzerland (Christoph Schaltegger and René Frey) and
Canada (Tracy Snoddon). A more detailed overview of the focus of this book
and outline of each contribution can be found in our introductory chapter
Fiscal federalism and EMU: an appraisal.
Finally, we hope that this collection of contributions from the leading-edge
of the subject will prove accessible to, and thereby popular amongst, those
undergraduate and postgraduate students to which it is primarily directed. It
only remains for us to once again thank the contributors for their willingness
to participate in this project and assure them that any remaining errors are our
responsibility.
Acknowledgements
There are many people to thank for their input into making this book possible.
Most obviously, we offer our deep gratitude to all the contributors for their
enthusiasm for this project and all their work in completing their chapters to a
universally high standard. Second, we must thank our Commissioning Editor
at Routledge, Rob Langham, for his support and patience over the duration of
this edited collection. Third, we would like to thank our colleagues at the
universities of Bradford and Central Lancashire for their comradeship and
general support for our research on European economic integration and the
work of the European Economies Research Unit (EERU). Finally, we owe a
deep sense of gratitude to our families and partners for their forbearance
during the preparation of this book. It is to them that this book is dedicated:
for PW: Barbara, Boyd and Claire; for MB: Mary, Ken and Beibei.
Haworth and Heaton Norris
May 2003
Introduction
Fiscal federalism and EMU: an appraisal
Philip Whyman and Mark Baimbridge
Introduction
The pace of integration amongst European Union (EU) member states has
accelerated considerably during the past decade, stimulated by the agreement
to form the Single Internal Market and further enhanced by the process of
forming an Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). Indeed, the latter will
fundamentally transform macroeconomic management as nation states relinquish exchange rate and monetary policy to a European Central Bank (ECB),
which will generate common interest and exchange rates shared by all
participants (EU Commission, 1992).
However, whilst the nature of the community of European nations has
evolved significantly over this period, many aspects of the EU financial and
administrative apparatus have failed to meet these new challenges. In particular, whilst detailed consideration has been given to monetary matters, the
inadequacies of the EU’s budgetary arrangements have received far less
attention. Discussion of fiscal policy alternatives has focused upon whether
individual member states will meet the Maastricht convergence criteria
(MCC) for membership, and whether the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP)
will prove too restrictive in practice. However, the advent of EMU, and the
new challenges this places upon economic management, will necessitate a
fundamental review of fiscal policy. In particular, consideration will have to
be given as to whether the medium- and long-term success of EMU depends
upon a system of fiscal federalism to ensure a stable and cohesive union.
Fiscal federalism refers to the development of a centralized budgetary
system comprizing all members of a federation or federal state. In mature
federal states, such as the United States, fiscal federalism operates through the
various federal taxes and transfers, which occur in addition to state budgetary
systems. In the context of European EMU, it specifically refers to the
enlargement of the EU Budget, or the implementation of a complementary
fiscal mechanism, which enables resources to be automatically transferred
from one member state to another in a similar manner to the way in which
regional redistribution is achieved in nation states.
2 Philip Whyman and Mark Baimbridge
Arguments for fiscal federalism
There are three principal advantages to fiscal federalism forming a central
feature of any emergent monetary union. First, the existence of external
shocks, which impact upon individual member states in various ways, undermines the effectiveness of a common monetary and exchange rate policy. The
persistence of these asymmetric shocks into EMU, therefore, provides a
potential focus for destabilization in the medium- and long-term. Assuming
that these adverse shocks occur randomly, a centrally organized, interregional
public insurance scheme can redistribute income from ‘favourably shocked’ to
‘adversely shocked’ regions to prevent an ‘unlucky’ area bearing a disproportionate financial burden. Consequently, countries that are negatively affected
by external shocks enjoy net automatic transfers from less badly affected
participating member states, thereby reducing the social costs of a monetary
union. For example, if France was hit by a negative external shock, its tax
revenues paid to the central fund or budget would decline automatically
whilst its drawings, in the form of unemployment benefit or other forms of
public expenditure, would rise. Similarly, if Germany was experiencing a
positive period of economic growth, its tax revenue would rise, thereby
increasing its contributions to the central fund, whilst its drawings would fall.
Consequently, fiscal federalism would ensure a net transfer of resources from a
temporarily relatively favoured member state to a temporarily weaker region
or nation.
The central fiscal system thus operates as a shock absorber for the monetary
union. It provides a partial substitute to the absence of exchange rate
flexibility within a single currency and the inability for a common monetary
policy to stabilize all participating economies simultaneously. The potential
cost for a nation experiencing a loss of competitiveness, in the absence of
devaluation and with insufficient wage-price flexibility and labour mobility
to provide corrective market forces, would be measured in regions of
persistent high unemployment and a rise in regional inequality (Bruno and
Sachs, 1985; Layard et al., 1991; OECD, 1986; von Hagen, 1992: 278). Moral
hazard is minimized by ensuring that no incentives exist that encourage
potential beneficiaries to manipulate the scheme to their advantage and in so
doing discourage participation from other regions (Goodhart and Smith,
1993: 424–5; Wyplotz, 1993: 181).
A second argument in favour of fiscal federalism is that a centralized budget
is better able to internalize externalities associated with both taxation and
expenditure. Governments may not undertake an optimal level of countercyclical stabilization due to the existence of regional-spillovers, whereby nonresidents derive some benefit from the policy whilst residents must bear the
full cost through higher debt or taxation. Factor mobility could also constrain
governments from incurring high levels of debt since the risk of higher future
taxes may encourage factor relocation to other regions, thus reducing the tax
base and providing short-term stability at the price of long-term instability.
Introduction: fiscal federalism and EMU 3
To the extent that this prisoner’s dilemma constrains government fiscal
flexibility, the solution requires a co-ordinated stabilization strategy solution
typical of non-co-operative game settings, necessitating either horizontal cooperation amongst member states or centralization under a federal authority
(Musgrave and Musgrave, 1973; Goodhart and Hansen, 1990; Rompuy et al.,
1993: 112–3; Masson, 1996). The operation of a common fiscal policy means
that participating member states can stabilize the tax base since, for a given
tax rate, revenues available for redistribution are more stable. Thus, a centralized fiscal system can better stabilize post-tax incomes and insure individuals
against country-specific shocks (Sala-i-Martin and Sachs, 1992; Alesina and
Perotti, 1998).
Finally, the need to strengthen the cohesion of EMU through redistribution
of resources to economically weaker regions, which reinforces political and
social solidarity throughout all participating member states, may entail a
significantly enhanced role for federal financial authority. In view of the
requirement for continued political support for all member states remaining
within the union and thus accepting the economic costs as well as benefits that
this entails, it is unlikely that this support will remain unchallenged in
individual countries should they suffer higher unemployment and declining
living standards relative to the remainder of EMU participants. Consequently,
a form of solidaristic transfer scheme is likely to prove necessary to minimize
the threat of inequality endangering the future cohesion of the monetary
union. Indeed, it is noticeable that all mature monetary unions which exist
within federal states, for example United States, Australia, Canada, Switzerland and Germany, all exhibit a significant degree of redistribution between
wealthy and poorer regions (Bayoumi and Masson, 1995).
Fiscal policy assignment
The probability that EMU will be adversely affected by the persistence of
asymmetric external shocks does not, of course, automatically justify fiscal
expansion at federal level. Indeed, the EU Commission’s definition of subsidiarity is consistent with both the ‘decentralization’ or ‘layer-cake’ theorem
governing policy assignment, where functions are performed by the lowest
efficient layer of government (Wheare, 1963; Oates, 1972: 35). This would
appear to indicate an initial preference for national fiscal autonomy within
EMU (Weber, 1991; Bayoumi and Masson, 1995: 268; Burkitt et al., 1996).
However, the design and impact of EMU upon member states significantly
weakens this conclusion for a number of reasons.
First, the Maastricht Treaty requirement for member states to avoid budget
deficits above 3 per cent of GDP, and government debt exceeding 60 per cent
of GDP, restricts the pursuit of counter-cyclical fiscal policy at the national
level (EC Commission, 1992; Holland, 1995; Burkitt et al., 1996: 3–6;
UNCTAD, 1996). Indeed, the Stability and Growth Pact further limits the
scope for national fiscal policy, as uncorrected ‘excessive’ deficits higher than 3
4 Philip Whyman and Mark Baimbridge
per cent of GDP would result in fines levied upon the offending nation of up to
0.5 per cent of GDP (EU Commission, 1997). Consequently, unless member
states are able to improve their budget balances considerably, so that they
maintain substantial budget surplus in boom years, they will be prevented
from utilizing automatic fiscal stabilizers as they do at present without the
counter-cyclical cost of a fine imposed by the EU authorities.
National fiscal policy is further undermined by the operation of the Single
Market and the reduction in seigniorage1 tax revenue for certain member
states as a direct result of EMU membership. The requirement for the abolition of exchange controls, contained within the single market legislation, was
intended to enhance financial market integration within the EU. However,
such integration reduces the ability of member states to borrow cheaply to
enable debt-financed fiscal expansion (Courchene, 1993: 152). Moreover, this
potential reduction in fiscal flexibility would be compounded for those
member states, which currently depend upon seigniorage for a significant
proportion of their total tax revenue. A stable EMU would require a convergence in national inflation rates and, assuming that the European Central Bank
achieved the low inflation target established in its founding chapter, seigniorage may be limited to an estimated 0.4 per cent of GDP for all participants.
This would particularly affect Portugal as seigniorage revenues totalled 3.6
per cent of its GDP in 1990, whilst Greece (2.3 per cent), Spain (1.9 per cent)
and Italy (1.3 per cent) would also lose a significant proportion of budget
revenue (Dornbusch, 1988: 26; Eichengreen, 1993: 1335–6; Spahn, 1993:
577). Thus, the fiscal drain experienced by certain member states would cause
fiscal retrenchment independently of the additional requirements imposed by
the Maastricht convergence criteria (Masson, 1996).
Criticism of active fiscal policy
The argument advanced to this point appears to demonstrate that EMU
requires an expansion in fiscal policy to prevent destabilization of the union in
the medium- or long-term and that, due to the constraints placed upon
national autonomy by the monetary union’s own rules intended to prevent
profligacy, this expansion should occur at central, rather than local, level.
However, this conclusion is not without its critics. For example, new-classical
economists argue that market forces will ensure a quick stabilization of any
imbalance caused by an external shock. Governments should therefore invest
in supply side measures to ensure greater wage-price flexibility and/or labour
mobility rather than utilize an inferior fiscal policy substitute (Goodhart and
Smith, 1993: 441; van der Ploeg, 1993: 144). Active fiscal policy is further
criticized on the grounds that a non-accommodative monetary and fiscal
stance may reduce the time lag involved in adjusting to a new equilibrium
position as individual economic actors internalize more of the costs of their
actions, whilst the operation of EMU may reduce persistent rigidities (Majocchi
and Rey, 1993). Similarly, international policy co-ordination may undermine
Introduction: fiscal federalism and EMU 5
central bank credibility and cause an unanticipated increase in inflation by
weakening the disciplining effects of excessive monetary growth upon the
exchange rate (van der Ploeg, 1993: 156). Finally, von Hagen (1992: 265)
rejects what he terms the ‘parallel unification proposition’, namely that
currency unification requires fiscal policy unification, although without
examining the merits of a policy framework being developed between the
extremes of either full fiscal autonomy or complete centralization at the
federal level.
Despite these criticisms, however, unless the discipline effect of EMU is
powerful and immediate, the short- and medium-term persistence of price
and factor rigidities would appear to necessitate the use of fiscal policy as a
stabilizing instrument. Although fiscal policy is, at best, an imperfect substitute for exchange rate flexibility and/or perfectly functioning market forces,
there appears little alternative to utilizing fiscal federalism to strengthen
monetary union or risk unemployment and income inequality persisting in
certain regions (Kenen, 1969; Lamfalussy, 1989; Masson, 1996: 1002).
Indeed, failure to develop such a stabilizing mechanism could even result in
the collapse of EMU as has been the case in almost all other similar international monetary arrangements which have not been based upon a firm
national identity. Thus, fiscal federalism may reduce the incentive for any
country to leave the EMU.
Organization of this book
It is this case for an enlargement of fiscal federalism, as an essential prerequisite for a successful single currency, that this book intends to examine.
Whereas fiscal federalism has often been analysed in terms of its efficiency and
operation within existing, mature monetary unions, relatively little has been
written on its arguably vital role in preventing external shocks exacerbating
differences in industrial structure of the participants, and thereby endangering the entire EMU project. Indeed, apart from a brief chapter in a few major
textbooks, this issue has been relatively overlooked. However, the question of
whether EMU can only be sustained by a massive transfer of resources from
national to federal level, whether fiscal policy is the best policy instrument to
be used to stabilize the single currency, and if so, in what form should fiscal
federalism be developed to maximize its positive impact, are all questions
which should be answered before countries sign up for monetary union
membership. The political sensitivity to some of these issues, implying as
they do a shift in resources from national to central control, should not obscure
the importance of the answers to these questions, as incorrect action could
undermine the future of European integration and the relative prosperity of
the region.
The book is in four parts, with the first chapter represented by a seminal
contribution from Wallace Oates, which outlines the theory of fiscal
federalism, a description of fiscal policy instruments, an introduction to the
6 Philip Whyman and Mark Baimbridge
debate surrounding jurisdictional boundaries and the objectives pursued by a
federal system. This comprehensive overview of the subject is complemented
by the chapter by Ralph Rotte, which examines the contribution of the SGP to
creating fiscal discipline and credibility of financial institutions within EMU.
The second part moves beyond the examination of economic theory to
evaluate the development of EU budgetary measures. Jeffrey Harrop opens
this topic by examining the development of the EU Budget, and in particular
the significant expansion of structural funding, the contributions of existing
expenditure to the redistribution of resources throughout the union and an
overview of recent budgetary reforms. Brian Ardy further extends this topic
by concentrating upon the contribution made by the EU Budget to the
stability of EMU. He describes the current structure of the EU Federal Budget
before examining questions of interregional stabilization, insurance and
redistribution.
The third part of the book seeks to apply the theory of fiscal federalism to
establish parameters for the development of fiscal policy within EMU. The
first contribution to this debate is written by Edward Gramlich and Paul
Wood, and presents a general overview of fiscal and monetary policies under
EMU. Writing with North Atlantic insights into European monetary
integration in mind, Gramlich and Wood discuss the interaction between EU
taxation and fiscal expenditure, the significance of fiscal policy and its
combination with monetary policy under EMU. This overview is followed by
the chapter of Robert Ackrill, which involves a critical evaluation of the
requirement for fiscal federalism to be established to stabilize monetary
union. From a discussion of fiscal functions and the significance of asymmetric
external shocks to the proper functioning of EMU, Ackrill focuses upon the
key question of whether national fiscal policy can provide a sufficient degree of
stabilization in the face of an external shock. Hence, is fiscal federalism really
needed?
The fourth and final part outlines the experience of mature fiscal federalism, utilizing the case studies found in Australia, Canada and Switzerland,
and draws appropriate lessons for its distinctive role in European monetary
union. The first contribution to this section, by Graeme Wells and Jeff
Petchey, outlines the evolution of the Australian federal system. Their
analysis notes the tendency for regional unions of states to embrace centralist
structures at the expense of member state autonomy. This case study can be
contrasted with the experience of the Swiss version of federalism, as described
by René Frey and Christoph Schaltegger, which has developed its distinct
balance between region and centre due to the interaction between the three
different language groups within the Swiss federation. Indeed, the maintenance of the federal identity probably requires a significant decentralization of
power to regional governments, in order to give expression to differences in
culture and policy preferences. Frey and Schaltegger discuss the balance
between autonomy, fragmentation and federal coherence, utilizing Hirschman’s (1970) terminology of voice, exit and loyalty. Finally, in this section,
Introduction: fiscal federalism and EMU 7
Tracy Snoddon details the Canadian system of fiscal federalism, with particular emphasis upon regional adjustment to asymmetric shocks, together with
the impact of fiscal policy upon regional convergence. Once again, the
Canadian system is designed to preserve national coherence in a very large
country, containing different language groups. Nevertheless, as each of these
case studies demonstrates, the theory of fiscal federalism can be applied differently in individual federations as a consequence of their unique population
characteristics, geographical size and/or democratically determined priorities.
This book is relatively unique in its coverage of these themes within one
text, as well as its inclusion of contributions from many of the world’s experts
on these issues within one volume. The editorial content of the book
endeavours to remain neutral in the sense that none of the arguments
contained in the volume are presented as being superior to any other, thereby
leaving it up to the reader to draw their own conclusions regarding the
necessity or inadvisability of fiscal federalism within EMU. Furthermore,
great efforts have been made to ensure that the content of the book is as
‘readable’ as possible, and thereby prove accessible to both undergraduate
students, specializing in European studies, economics or politics, as well as
providing useful reference material for postgraduates and academics.
Note
1 Seigniorage occurs where the purchasing power of government securities is eroded
by inflation, thus providing an inexpensive method to finance public expenditure
by, in effect, borrowing at very low real rates of interest. Thus, if a government
issues securities paying an interest rate of 3 per cent, when inflation is at 10 per
cent, it is in effect borrowing money at a 7 per cent negative real interest rate.
Seigniorage is particularly significant in small, regulated markets with a limited
choice of investment opportunities, and in economies susceptible to high rates of
inflation.
References
Alesina, A. and Perotti, R. (1998) ‘Economic Risk and Political Risk in Fiscal Unions’,
Economic Journal, 108(449), 989–1008.
Bayoumi, T. and Masson, P. R. (1995) ‘Fiscal Flows in the United States and Canada:
Lessons for Monetary Union in Europe’, European Economic Review, 39, 253–74.
Bruno, M. and Sachs, J. D. (1985) Economics of Worldwide Stagflation, Blackwell,
Oxford.
Burkitt, B., Baimbridge, M. and Whyman, P. (1996) There is an Alternative, Nelson &
Pollard, Oxford.
Courchene, T. J. (1993) ‘Reflections on Canadian Federalism: Are There Implications
for European Economic and Monetary Union?’, in ‘The Economics of Community
Public Finance’, European Economy, Reports and Studies, 5, 127–66.
Dornbusch, R. (1988) ‘The European Monetary System, the Dollar and the Yen’, in F.
Giovazzi, S. Micossi and M. Miller (eds) The European Monetary System, Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge.
8 Philip Whyman and Mark Baimbridge
Eichengreen, B. (1993) ‘European Monetary Unification’, Journal of Economic
Literature, 31, 1321–57.
EU Commission (1992) Treaty on European Union, Office for the Official Publications
of the European Communities, Luxembourg.
EU Commission (1997) ‘The Stability and Growth Pact’, InfEuro, Office for the
Official Publications of the European Communities, Luxembourg.
Goodhart, C. A. E. and Hansen, E. (1990) ‘Fiscal Policy and EMU’, in R. Dornbusch,
C. A. E. Goodhart and R. Layard (eds) Britain and EMU, Centre for Economic
Performance, London.
Goodhart, C. A. E. and Smith, S. (1993) ‘Stabilisation. In The Economics of
Community Public Finance’, European Economy, Reports and Studies, 5, 419–55.
Hirschman, A. O. (1970) Exit, Voice and Loyalty: Responses to Decline in Firms,
Organisations and States, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.
Holland, S. (1995) ‘Squaring the Circle? The Maastricht Convergence Criteria,
Cohesion and Employment’, in K. Coates and S. Holland (eds) Full Employment for
Europe, Spokesman, Nottingham.
Kenen, P. B. (1969) ‘The Theory of Optimum Currency Areas: An Eclectic View’, in
R. Mundell and A. Swoboda (eds) Monetary Problems of the International Economy,
University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Lamfalussy, A. (1989) ‘Macro-Co-ordination of Fiscal Policies in an Economic and
Monetary Union in Europe, in Committee for the Study of Economic and Monetary
Union’ [Delors Report] (ed.) Report of Economic and Monetary Union in the European
Community, Office for the Official Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg.
Layard, R., Nickell, S. and Jackman, R. (1991) Unemployment: Macroeconomic
Performance and the Labour Market, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Majocchi, A. and Rey, M. (1993) ‘A Special Financial Support Scheme in Economic
and Monetary Union: Need and Nature’, in ‘The Economics of Community Public
Finance’, European Economy, Reports and Studies, 5, 459–80.
Masson, P. R. (1996) ‘Fiscal Dimensions of EMU’, Economic Journal, 106(437), 996–
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edn, McGraw-Hill, London.
Oates, W. E. (1972) Fiscal Federalism, Harcourt-Brace and Jovanovich, New York.
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109–35.
Sala-i-Martin, X. and Sachs, J. (1992) ‘Fiscal Federalism and Optimum Currency
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Introduction: fiscal federalism and EMU 9
Van der Ploeg, F. (1993) ‘Macroeconomic Policy Co-ordination Issues during the
Various Phases of Economic and Monetary Integration in Europe’, in ‘The
Economics of EMU’, European Economy, Special Edition 1, 136–64.
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EMU – Background Studies’, European Economy, 44, 165–84.
Part I
Theory of fiscal federalism
1
1
An essay on fiscal federalism
Wallace E. Oates
Introduction
Fiscal decentralization is in vogue. Both in the industrialized and in the
developing world, nations are turning to devolution to improve the performance of their public sectors. In the United States, the central government has
turned back significant portions of federal authority to the states for a wide
range of major programmes, including welfare, Medicaid, legal services,
housing, and job training. The hope is that state and local governments, being
closer to the people, will be more responsive to the particular preferences of
their constituencies and will be able to find new and better ways to provide
these services. In the United Kingdom, both Scotland and Wales have opted
under the Blair government for their own regional parliaments. And in Italy
the movement toward decentralization has gone so far as to encompass a
serious proposal for the separation of the nation into two independent
countries. In the developing world, we likewise see widespread interest in
fiscal decentralization with the objective of breaking the grip of central
planning that, in the view of many, has failed to bring these nations onto a
path of self-sustaining growth.
But the proper goal of restructuring the public sector cannot simply be
decentralization. The public sector in nearly all countries consists of several
different levels. The basic issue is one of aligning responsibilities and fiscal
instruments with the proper levels of government. As Alexis de Tocqueville
observed more than a century ago, ‘The federal system was created with the
intention of combining the different advantages which result from the magnitude and the littleness of nations’ (1980, 1: 163). But to realize these ‘different
advantages,’ we need to understand which functions and instruments are best
centralized and which are best placed in the sphere of decentralized levels of
government. This is the subject matter of fiscal federalism. As a sub-field of
public finance, fiscal federalism addresses the vertical structure of the public
sector. It explores, both in normative and positive terms, the roles of the
different levels of government and the ways in which they relate to one another
through such instruments as intergovernmental grants.2
My purpose in this essay is not to provide a comprehensive survey of fiscal
federalism. I begin with a brief review and some reflections on the traditional
14 Wallace E. Oates
theory of fiscal federalism: the assignment of functions to levels of government, the welfare gains from fiscal decentralization, and the use of fiscal
instruments. I then turn to some of the new directions in recent work in the
field and explore a series of current topics: laboratory federalism, interjurisdictional competition and environmental federalism, the political economy
of fiscal federalism, market-preserving federalism, and fiscal decentralization
in the developing and transitional economies. Some of this research is
expanding the scope of the traditional analyses in important and interesting
ways. This will provide an opportunity both to comment on this new work
and to suggest some potentially fruitful avenues for further research.
The basic theory of fiscal federalism
The traditional theory of fiscal federalism lays out a general normative
framework for the assignment of functions to different levels of government
and the appropriate fiscal instruments for carrying out these functions (e.g.,
Richard Musgrave, 1959). At the most general level, this theory contends
that the central government should have the basic responsibility for the
macroeconomic stabilization function and for income redistribution in the
form of assistance to the poor. In both cases, the basic argument stems from
some fundamental constraints on lower level governments. In the absence of
monetary and exchange rate prerogatives and with highly open economies
that cannot contain much of the expansionary impact of fiscal stimuli,
provincial, state, and local governments simply have very limited means for
traditional macroeconomic control of their economies. Similarly, the mobility
of economic units can seriously constrain attempts to redistribute income. An
aggressive local programme for the support of low-income households, for
example, is likely to induce an influx of the poor and encourage an exodus of
those with higher income who must bear the tax burden.3 In addition to these
functions, the central government must provide certain ‘national’ public
goods (like national defence) that provide services to the entire population of
the country.
Decentralized levels of government have their raison d’etre in the provision
of goods and services whose consumption is limited to their own jurisdictions.
By tailoring outputs of such goods and services to the particular preferences
and circumstances of their constituencies, decentralized provision increases
economic welfare above that which results from the more uniform levels of
such services that are likely under national provision. The basic point here is
simply that the efficient level of output of a ‘local’ public good (i.e., that for
which the sum of residents’ marginal benefits equals marginal cost) is likely to
vary across jurisdictions as a result of both differences in preferences and cost
differentials. To maximize overall social welfare thus requires that local outputs vary accordingly.
These precepts, however, should be regarded more as general ‘guidelines’
than firm ‘principles’. As has been pointed out in the literature, there is
An essay on fiscal federalism 15
certainly some limited scope for decentralized macroeconomic efforts (Edward
Gramlich, 1987) and for assistance to the poor. In particular, there is a
theoretical case for some poor relief at local levels (Mark Pauly, 1973), and the
fact is that state and local governments undertake a significant amount of
redistributive activity.4
Moreover, this prescription is quite a general one. It does not offer a precise
delineation of the specific goods and services to be provided at each level of
government. And indeed the spatial pattern of consumption of certain goods
and services like education and health is open to some debate. As a result, we
find in cross-country comparisons some divergence in just what is considered,
say, ‘local’ in its incidence. The specific pattern of goods and services provided
by different levels of government will thus differ to some extent in time and
place.5 This is to be expected. Nonetheless, there remains much to be said for
the basic principle of fiscal decentralization: the presumption that the provision of public services should be located at the lowest level of government
encompassing, in a spatial sense, the relevant benefits and costs.6
Let me offer three observations on the general theory. First, the foundations
of the Decentralization Theorem need some elaboration. The theorem is itself
a straightforward normative proposition that states simply that ‘. . . in the
absence of cost-savings from the centralized provision of a [local public] good
and of interjurisdictional externalities, the level of welfare will always be at
least as high and typically higher if Pareto-efficient levels of consumption are
provided in each jurisdiction than if any single, uniform level of consumption
is maintained across all jurisdictions’ (Oates, 1972: 54). The theorem thus
establishes, on grounds of economic efficiency, a presumption in favor of the
decentralized provision of public goods with localized effects. While the
proposition may seem trivially obvious, it is of some interest both in terms of
setting forth the conditions needed for its validity and, with some further
analysis, for providing some insights into the determinants of the magnitude
of the welfare gains from fiscal decentralization (Oates, 1998).
But there is more to the story. The presumption in favour of decentralized
finance is established by simply assuming that centralized provision will
entail a uniform level of output across all jurisdictions. In a setting of perfect
information, it would obviously be possible for a benevolent central planner to
prescribe the set of differentiated local outputs that maximizes overall social
welfare; there would be no need for fiscal decentralization (although one might
wish to describe such an outcome as decentralized in spirit!). The response to
this observation has been twofold. First, one can realistically introduce some
basic imperfections (or symmetries) in information. More specifically,
individual local governments are presumably much closer to the people and
geography of their respective jurisdictions; they possess knowledge of both
local preferences and cost conditions that a central agency is unlikely to have.
Second, there are typically political pressures (or perhaps even constitutional
constraints) that limit the capacity of central governments to provide higher
levels of public services in some jurisdictions than others. These constraints
16 Wallace E. Oates
tend to require a certain degree of uniformity in central directives. There are
thus important informational and political constraints that are likely to prevent central programmes from generating an optimal pattern of local outputs.
My second observation concerns the magnitude of the welfare gains from fiscal
decentralization. We can, in principle, measure the gains from the decentralized
provision of public goods relative to a more uniform, centrally determined
level of output. The theory suggests that the magnitude of these gains depends
both on the extent of the heterogeneity in demands across jurisdictions and on
any inter-jurisdictional differences in costs. In particular, we find that the
potential gains from decentralization stemming from inter-jurisdictional
differences in demand vary inversely with the price elasticity of demand. If the
costs of provision are the same across jurisdictions, but demands differ, then
the extent of the welfare loss from a centrally imposed, uniform level of output
increases, other things equal, with the price inelasticity of demand.7 There is a
large body of econometric evidence that finds that the demand for local public
goods is typically highly price inelastic. This suggests that the potential
welfare gains from decentralized finance may well be quite large.8
Pursuing this point into the realm of positive economics, we might expect
the magnitude of the potential gains from fiscal decentralization to have some
explanatory power. Where these gains are large, we would expect to find that
the public sector is more decentralized. In exploring this issue some years ago,
I found some (perhaps vague) evidence in its support: in a sample of countries,
the fiscal share of the central government varied inversely with an index of
‘sectionalism,’ a measure of the extent to which people in geographical subareas of a country identify ‘self-consciously and distinctively with that area’
(Oates, 1972: 207–8). More recently, Koleman Strumpf and Felix OberholzerGee (1998), in a more sharply focused study of states and counties in the
United States, find that the decision to allow counties a local option to legalize
the consumption of alcoholic beverages depends significantly on a measure of
the heterogeneity in preferences across counties within each state. There is, I
think, some interesting work to be done in exploring the extent to which the
potential gains from decentralization can explain the observed variation in
actual governmental structure and policies.9
Third, I sense a widespread impression, suggested in some of the literature,
that the gains from decentralization have their source in the famous Tiebout
model (Tiebout, 1956). In this model, highly mobile households ‘vote with
their feet: they choose as a jurisdiction of residence that locality that provides
the fiscal package best suited to their tastes. In the limiting case, the Tiebout
solution does indeed generate a first-best outcome that mimics the outcome in
a competitive market. But the gains from decentralization, although typically
enhanced by such mobility, are by no means wholly dependent upon them.10
In fact, if there was absolutely nothing – mobile households, factors, or
whatever, there would still exist, in general, gains from decentralization. The
point here is simply that even in the absence of mobility, the efficient level of
output of a ‘local’ public good, as determined by the Samuelson condition that
An essay on fiscal federalism 17
the sum of the marginal rates of substitution equals marginal cost, will
typically vary from one jurisdiction to another. To take one example, the
efficient level of air quality in Los Angeles is surely much different from that
in, say, Chicago.
This point is of importance, because the Tiebout model is often viewed as a
peculiarly United States construction. The relatively footloose households
that it envisions, responding to such things as local schools and taxes, seem to
characterize the United States much better than, say, most European countries.
As a result, observers outside the United States tend to believe that this strand
of the theory of local finance is of limited relevance in their settings. While
there may well be some truth to this, it most emphatically does not follow that
there are no longer any significant welfare gains from the decentralized provision of public goods.
Fiscal instruments in a federal system
To carry out their functions, the various levels of government require specific
fiscal instruments. On the revenue side, governments will typically have
access to tax and debt instruments. But in a federal system there is a further
method for allocating funds among the different levels of the public sector:
intergovernmental grants. One level of government may generate tax revenues
in excess of its expenditures and then transfer the surplus to another level of
government to finance part of the latter’s budget. I want to review and comment briefly on the use of these fiscal instruments in a federal fiscal system.
Taxation in a federal system
The determination of the vertical structure of taxes is known in the literature
as the ‘tax-assignment problem’ (McLure 1983). And the basic issue here is
the normative question: Which taxes are best suited for use at the different
levels of government? The question is typically posed in a setting in which
there exists a nation state with a central government, where there is little or no
mobility across national borders; at decentralized levels, in contrast, economic
agents, goods, and resources have significant mobility across jurisdictional
boundaries with the extent of this mobility increasing at successively lower
levels of government. ‘Local’ government, for analytical purposes, may sometimes be characterized as operating in a setting in which economic units can
move without cost among jurisdictions.
The difference in the mobility of taxed units at the central and decentralized levels has important implications for the design of the vertical structure
of taxation. Taxes, as we know, can be the source of distortions in resource
allocation, as buyers shift their purchases away from taxed goods. In a spatial
setting, such distortions take the form of locational inefficiencies, as taxed
units (or owners of taxed items) seek out jurisdictions where they can obtain
relatively favourable tax treatment. High excise taxes in one jurisdiction, for
18 Wallace E. Oates
example, may lead purchasers to bear unproductive travel costs in order to
purchase the taxed items in jurisdictions with lower tax rates.
Such examples can suggest that decentralized levels of government
should avoid the taxation of highly mobile economic units (be they households, capital, or final goods). But this in itself is not correct. The real
implication is that decentralized levels of government should avoid non-benefit
taxes on mobile units. Or, more accurately, the analysis shows that on
efficiency grounds decentralized governments should tax mobile economic
units with benefit levies. Such economic units, in short, should pay for the
benefits that they receive from the public services that local governments
provide to them.
The most well-known case of this is the earlier-discussed Tiebout model in
which local jurisdictions use benefit taxes that effectively communicate to
households the cost of consuming different levels of local public goods; this
results in an efficient pattern of consumption of these goods. But this is true
not only for households. If local governments provide local inputs that
increase the productivity of capital employed in their jurisdictions, then they
should levy benefit taxes on capital in order to provide the set of signals
needed for the efficient deployment of capital across localities. In sum,
efficiency requires not only that decentralized jurisdictions refrain from
non-benefit taxation of mobile economic units, but that they actively engage
in benefit taxation where the public sector provides services to these units.
The public sector must for various reasons rely to a substantial extent on
non-benefit taxes. Redistributive programmes that provide assistance to the
poor, for example, simply transfer income. But, as noted earlier, such programmes are not well suited to use at decentralized levels of government,
where the mobility of economic units across local boundaries can undermine
the workings of such programmes. It is for this reason that the literature
suggests that non-benefit taxes, to the extent they are needed, are best
employed by higher levels of government.
But provincial, state, and local governments do, in fact, make use of some
such levies.11 In a seminal treatment of this issue making use of an optimal
taxation framework, Roger Gordon (1983) has explored the ramifications of
the decentralized use of a wide range of non-benefit taxes. And Gordon finds
several forms of potential distortion that result from an individual jurisdiction’s ignoring the effects of its fiscal decisions elsewhere in the system;
these include inefficiencies involving, for example, the ‘exporting’ of tax
burdens, external congestion effects, and impacts on levels of revenues in other
jurisdictions, as well as certain equity issues associated with a generally
regressive pattern of tax incidence.12
The analysis suggests, moreover, some guidelines for the use of such taxes.
A reliance on resident-based taxes rather than source-based taxes, for example, can
lessen tax-induced distortions by reducing the scope for tax-exporting (Inman
and Rubinfeld, 1996; McKinnon and Nechyba, 1997).13 The analysis,
moreover, establishes a presumption for the taxation of relatively immobile
An essay on fiscal federalism 19
economic units. A particularly attractive tax base is unimproved land, since a
tax on a factor or good in perfectly inelastic supply will not be the source of
any locational inefficiencies. Such taxes (and any associated benefits from
spending programmes) will simply be capitalized into local land values. Thus,
fiscally hard-pressed city governments have at their disposal a tax base that
cannot escape them through mobility. There is some evidence in this regard
that the city of Pittsburgh, which has used a graded property tax under which
land is taxed at five times the rate on structures, has experienced an expansion
in building activity that might not have been forthcoming in the presence of a
higher tax on mobile capital.
Intergovernmental grants and revenue sharing
Intergovernmental grants constitute a distinctive and important policy
instrument in fiscal federalism that can serve a number of different functions.
The literature emphasizes three potential roles for such grants: the
internalization of spillover benefits to other jurisdictions, fiscal equalization
across jurisdictions, and an improved overall tax system.
Grants can take either of two general forms. They can be ‘conditional
grants’ that place any of various kinds of restrictions on their use by the
recipient. Or they can be ‘unconditional,’ that is, lump-sum transfers to be
used in any way the recipient wishes. The theory prescribes that conditional
grants in the form of matching grants (under which the grantor finances a
specified share of the recipient’s expenditure) be employed where the provision
of local services generates benefits for residents of other jurisdictions.
The rationale here is simply the usual Pigouvian one for subsidies that
induce individuals (in this case policy-makers or the electorate) to incorporate
spillover benefits into their decision-making calculus. The magnitude of the
matching shares, in such instances, should reflect the extent of the spillovers.14
In contrast, unconditional grants are typically the appropriate vehicle for
purposes of fiscal equalization. The purpose of these grants is to channel funds
from relatively wealthy jurisdictions to poorer ones. Such transfers are often
based on an equalization formula that measures the ‘fiscal need’ and ‘fiscal
capacity’ of each province, state, or locality. These formulae result in a disproportionate share of the transfers going to those jurisdictions with the greatest
fiscal need and the least fiscal capacity.15
Although widely used, equalizing intergovernmental grants are by no
means a necessary feature of fiscal federalism (Usher, 1995; Boadway, 1996).
Economists normally think of redistributive measures from rich to poor as
those that transfer income from high- to low-income individuals. Intergovernmental equalizing transfers require a somewhat different justification
based on social values.16 In practice, such equalizing grants play a major role in
many countries: in the fiscal systems of Australia, Canada, and Germany, for
example, there are substantial transfers of income from wealthy provinces or
states to poorer ones. In the United States, in contrast, equalizing grants from
20 Wallace E. Oates
the federal to state governments have never amounted to much. Intergovernmental grants in the United States typically address specific functions
or programmes, but usually do not accomplish much in the way of fiscal
equalization. At the levels of the states, however, there are many such programmes under which states provide equalizing grants to local jurisdictions –
notably school districts.
Fiscal equalization is a contentious issue from an efficiency perspective.
Some observers see such grants as playing an important role in allowing poorer
jurisdictions to compete effectively with fiscally stronger ones. This view
holds that, in the absence of such grants, fiscally favoured jurisdictions can
exploit their position to promote continued economic growth, some of
which comes at the expense of poorer ones. Fiscal equalization, from this
perspective, helps to create a more level playing field for interjurisdictional
competition.17
But the case is not entirely persuasive. Others have argued that fiscal equalization can stand in the way of needed regional adjustments that promote
development in poorer regions. McKinnon (1997a), for example, contends
that in the United States, the economic resurgence of the South following
World War II resulted from relatively low levels of wages and other costs. It
was this attraction of low wages and costs that ultimately induced economic
movement to the South, bringing with it a new prosperity. Fiscal equalization, from this perspective, may actually hold back the development of
poorer areas by impeding the needed interregional flow of resources (both
emigration and immigration) in response to cost differentials.
But the primary justification for fiscal equalization must be on equity
grounds. And it is as a redistributive issue that it continues to occupy a central
place on the political stage. In some cases, as in Canada, it may provide the
glue necessary to hold the federation together. In other instances, like Italy, it
may become a divisive force, where regions, weary of large and long-standing
transfers of funds to poorer areas, actually seek a dissolution of the union.
Fiscal equalization is a complex economic and political issue.
The third potential role for intergovernmental grants is to sustain a more
equitable and efficient overall tax system. For reasons we have discussed,
centrally administered, non-benefit taxes with a single rate applying to the
national tax base will not generate the sorts of locational inefficiencies associated with varying rates across decentralized jurisdictions. Moreover, central
taxes can be more progressive, again without establishing fiscal incentives for
relocation. There is, in fact, considerable evidence to indicate that state and
local systems of taxes are typically more regressive than central taxation (e.g.,
Chernick, 1992). There is thus some force in an argument for ‘revenue sharing’
under which the central government effectively serves as a tax-collecting
agent for decentralized levels of government.18 The central government then
transfers funds, in a presumably unconditional form, to provinces, states, and/or
localities. It is certainly possible, where the polity wishes, to build equalizing
elements into these transfers. While there is here a real case for the use of
An essay on fiscal federalism 21
intergovernmental grants, a most important qualification is that such a system
of grants must not be too large in the sense of undermining fiscal discipline at
lower levels of government.
The prescriptive theory of intergovernmental grants thus leads to a vision of
a system in which there exists a set of open-ended matching grants, where the
matching rates reflect the extent of benefit spillovers across jurisdictional
boundaries, and a set of unconditional grants for revenue sharing and, perhaps,
equalization purposes. Such a conception has, however, only modest explanatory power. We do, in fact, find federal matching programmes that have
supported a number of state and local activities with spillover effects,
including, for example, grants for inter-state highway construction. However,
on closer examination, important anomalies appear. These grants are often
closed, rather than open, ended. Thus, they do not provide incentives for
expansion at the margin. Moreover, the federal matching shares are typically
much larger than justifiable by any plausible level of spillover benefits. More
generally, in a careful study of the intergovernmental grant system, Inman
(1988) concludes that the economic theory of intergovernmental grants does
not provide a very satisfactory explanation of the structure of US grant
programmes; he finds that a political model can do a much better job of
explaining these programmes.19
Some years ago, David Bradford and I (1971a and b) tried to lay the
foundations for a positive theory of the response to intergovernmental grants
by setting forth a framework in which the budgetary decisions of the
recipients of such grants are treated explicitly in a collective-choice setting. In
short, we treated these grants, not as grants to an individual decision-maker,
but rather as grants to polities that make budgetary decisions by some
collective algorithm (such as simple majority rule). This exercise produced
some intriguing equivalence theorems. For example, it is straightforward to
show that a lump-sum grant to a group of people is fully equivalent in all its
effects, both allocative and distributive, to a set of grants directly to the
individuals in the group. Moreover, this result applies to an important class of
collective-choice procedures, encompassing several of the major models
employed in the public-finance literature. These theorems, known as the ‘veil
hypothesis,’ thus imply that a grant to a community is fully equivalent to a
central tax rebate to the individuals in the community; intergovernmental
grants, according to this view, are simply a ‘veil’ for a federal tax cut.
The difficulty is that this hypothesis has not fared well in empirical testing.
It implies that the budgetary response to an intergovernmental transfer should
be (roughly) the same as the response to an equal increase in private income in
the community. But empirical studies of the response to grants have rejected
this equivalence time and again. Such studies invariably find that state and
local government spending is much more responsive to increases in
intergovernmental receipts than it is to increases in the community’s private
income. And this has come to be known as the ‘flypaper effect’ – money sticks
where it hits. While this finding may not be all that surprising, it is not so
22 Wallace E. Oates
easy to reconcile with models of rational choice, for it suggests that the same
budget constraint gives rise to different choices depending on what form the
increment to the budget takes. There is now a large literature that tries in a
variety of ways (some quite ingenious) to explain the flypaper effect.20 James
Hines and Richard Thaler (1995) have suggested that this is just one of a more
general class of cases where having money on hand (e.g., from grants) has a
much different effect on spending behaviour than where the money must be
raised (e.g., by taxation).
Much of the early empirical work on the expenditure response to intergovernmental grants studied the period from the 1950s through the 1970s
when these grants exhibited a continuing path of expansion. As a result, much
of the interest focused on the budgetary response to increases in grants.
However, in more recent times, efforts at fiscal retrenchment and devolution
have led to large cuts in a wide range of federal grant programmes. And this
has raised the interesting and important question of whether the response to
cuts in grants is similar in sign and magnitude to the response to increases in
these grants. Gramlich (1987), for example, observed that during this period
of retrenchment, state and local governments responded to the cutbacks in
grants by picking up much of the slack: they increased their own taxes and
replaced in large part the lost grant funds so as to maintain levels of existing
programmes. If Gramlich is right, then we should observe a basic asymmetry
in response: the spending of recipients should be more responsive to increases
in grant monies than to decreases in these revenues.
This issue is of some importance if we are to understand the budgetary
implications of the ongoing process of fiscal decentralization. In the first
study of this issue, William Stine (1994), examining the response of county
governments in Pennsylvania, found just the opposite of Gramlich’s prediction: his estimates imply that these county governments not only failed to
replace lost grant revenues, but that they reduced their spending from ownrevenues on these programmes as well, giving rise to a ‘super-flypaper effect.’
There are, however, some tricky and troublesome issues of measurement and
interpretation in the Stine study. Subsequently, pursuing national aggregate
data on the state local government sector, Shama Gamkhar and I (1996) were
unable to reject the hypothesis that the expenditure response to increases and
decreases in intergovernmental grants has the same absolute value per dollar
of grants. Our findings are thus consistent with the proposition that the
flypaper effect operates symmetrically in both directions. But clearly much
remains to be done on this issue.
A note on jurisdictional boundaries
The treatment to this point has implicitly taken as given a pattern of boundaries that divide the nation-state into a set of jurisdictions for decentralized
governance. The existence and magnitude of spillover effects from localized
public policies clearly depend on the geographical extent of the relevant
An essay on fiscal federalism 23
jurisdiction. One way to deal with such spillovers is to increase the size of the
jurisdiction thereby internalizing all the benefits and costs. The problem, of
course, is that such an extension may involve welfare losses from the reduced
capacity to differentiate local outputs. There is clearly some kind of trade-off
here between internalizing spillover benefits (and costs) and allowing local
differentiation.
In practice, much of the problem stems from a set of existing boundaries
that are largely historically and culturally determined and that may make
little sense in terms of the economic and geographical realities. Consider, for
example, the United States. Suppose that we were to begin with a tabula rasa, a
completely undefined set of boundaries for states and localities. And we set for
ourselves the task of laying out both a rational set of levels of government and
borders for the jurisdictions at each level of government. One thing seems
clear: such a system of jurisdictions would bear little resemblance to our
existing map. The States, in particular, are quite poorly designed to deal with
the provision of certain important public goods, notably environmental
resources. To take one example, rivers were used historically (for understandable reasons) to mark off one state from another. But from the perspective of
effective management of a public good, this is the worst sort of border. It
means that two independent and autonomous jurisdictions are making
decisions that affect the public good whose output they jointly share. It seems
clear that it would make much more sense to place such resources within a
single jurisdiction. My own surmise is that a much more rational map would
probably entail (1) some fairly sizable regional governments that extend over
water sheds, air sheds, and other environmental resources; (2) metropolitan
governments that encompass centre cities and the suburbs that house many
city workers; and (3) smaller local governments that allow groups of residents
to determine services of relevance mainly to themselves.
But political realities being what they are, we can expect to continue our
collective life with much the same map in place. There does, however, remain
some flexibility in terms of creating useful compacts or associations of jurisdictions to deal with particular issues. The management of the Chesapeake
Bay, for example, is in important organizational ways now the joint enterprise
of the relevant states (Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia), and
Washington, DC, with an important role also played by the federal government. Likewise, the recognition that the management of ground-level ozone
involves pollutants that travel long distances across the mid-western and northeastern parts of the United States has led, under congressional legislation in
1990, to the formation of an Ozone Transport Region (OTR) for the coordination of efforts to manage air quality in eleven eastern states and the
District of Columbia. Such regional organizations can be seen as the outcome
of a kind of Coasian process in which inter-jurisdictional externalities are
addressed through negotiation and co-ordinated decision-making. The history
of such enterprises, however, attests to their difficulty. The fascinating study
by Bruce Ackerman et al. (1974), for example, of the attempt to create a
24 Wallace E. Oates
‘model regional agency’ in the form of the Delaware River Basin Commission,
reveals all the complexities and perverse incentives that can bedevil such joint
enterprises. Nevertheless, such co-ordination does, in principle, offer an
important avenue for addressing such inter-jurisdictional concerns.
Laboratory federalism and welfare reform
It seems ironic in the light of the preceding treatment of principles (or
guidelines) for fiscal federalism to find that welfare reform is in the vanguard
of United States moves towards fiscal decentralization. The analysis suggests
that the threat of mobility of both low and high income households will result
in decentralized policies that provide too little assistance to the poor (sometimes described as a ‘race-to-the-bottom’). Nevertheless, the decision has been
made to shift the primary responsibility for poor relief back to the states.
Under measures signed into law in 1996, the federal government has replaced
the long-standing federal entitlement programmes, which came with both
detailed rules and generous matching grants to the states, with a system of
block grants with few strings attached. The states now have broad scope to
determine both the form and levels of assistance under their programmes to
assist poor households.21
How are we to understand this reform? Does it represent an outright
rejection of the economic principles of fiscal federalism? My answer is a
qualified no. There exists widespread recognition of, and concern with, the
likely shortcomings of a decentralized system of poor relief. Policy-makers are
well aware of the threat of strategic cuts in state levels of welfare support. But,
as I read it, we have decided to live with this threat in order to seek out
superior policy alternatives. And this brings us to another dimension of fiscal
federalism: laboratory federalism.
In a setting of imperfect information with learning-by-doing, there are
potential gains from experimentation with a variety of policies for addressing
social and economic problems. And a federal system may offer some real
opportunities for encouraging such experimentation and thereby promoting
‘technical progress’ in public policy. This point was made long ago by James
Bryce (1888) who, in his insightful study of the US system of government,
observed that ‘Federalism enables a people to try experiments which could not
safely be tried in a large centralized country’ (I: 353). Better known is a later
statement by Justice Louis Brandeis, who wrote in 1932 that:
There must be power in the States and the Nation to re-mould, through
experimentation, our economic practices and institutions to meet
changing social and economic needs. It is one of the happy incidents of the
federal system that a single courageous State may, if its citizens choose,
serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic experiments
without risk to the rest of the country.
(Osborne, 1988)
An essay on fiscal federalism 25
It is my sense that this is the primary thrust behind the current welfare
reform. There exists much disappointment and dissatisfaction with the operation and results under the traditional federal welfare programmes. But we
really don’t have a clear sense of how to restructure them to achieve our
societal goals of providing needed relief and, at the same time, establishing an
effective set of incentives to move people off welfare and into jobs. The recent
legislation that transfers the responsibility for these programmes back to the
states represents, I believe, a recognition of the failure of existing programmes
and an attempt to make use of the states as ‘laboratories’ to try to find out what
sorts of programmes can work.22
There are, in fact, a number of important and intriguing examples of policies
whose advent was at the state or local level and that later became fixtures of
federal policy. Unemployment insurance, for example, was a state-level policy
before the federal government made it effectively mandatory on a national
scale in the 1930s. More recently, in the area of environmental policy, the
experience in a number of states with their own forms of emissions trading was
an important prelude to the adoption, in the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments, of a national trading programme in sulfur allowances to address the
problem of acid rain. Without this experience in a number of states, I seriously
doubt that policy-makers would have been willing to introduce such a new
and unfamiliar policy measure as tradeable emissions rights on a national
scale. More generally, since the dawn of the nation, programmes successfully
developed at the state level have often provided models for subsequent federal
programmes.
States, of course, may learn from others so that the diffusion of successful
policy innovations may be horizontal as well as vertical. Both forms of
diffusion have been the subject of study by a number of political scientists.
Virginia Gray (1973) and Everett Rogers (1983), for example, have found that
the cumulative distribution of states by date of adoption takes the S-curve
shape, familiar from the study of the spread of other forms of innovation.
Others, like Jack Walker (1969), James Lutz (1987), David Huff et al. (1988),
and David Nice (1994), have explored the geographical and other determinants of the pattern of adoptions by states. Empirical studies of vertical
diffusion are less numerous. Thomas Anton (1989), Keith Boeckelman (1992),
and Michael Sparer and Lawrence Brown (1996) have examined the extent to
which federal measures draw on the experience of the states. Some of this
literature is relatively sceptical of the link. Sparer and Brown, for example,
argue that (at least for health care), ‘these laboratory adoptions and adaptations are probably more the exception than the rule’ (p. 196).
What are we to make of all this? A little reflection suggests first that there
is nothing in principle to prevent the central government from undertaking
limited experiments without committing the nation to an untested and risky
policy measure. Indeed, there have been a number of such social experiments
with, for example, income-maintenance and housing-allowance programmes
that have generated valuable information about how programmes work and
26 Wallace E. Oates
the response of participants to various values of the key parameters. We don’t
necessarily need states as the ‘laboratories’ for experiments. At the same time,
one might suspect that relatively independent efforts in a large number of
states will generate a wider variety of approaches to public policy than a set of
centrally designed experiments.
A basic problem here is that there has been little in the way of a real theory
of laboratory federalism to organize our thought and to guide empirical
studies. However, the beginnings of some theory are emerging, and they are
quite illuminating. Susan Rose-Ackerman (1980) and, more recently,
Strumpf (1997) have taken two quite different formal approaches to policy
innovation in a federal system. One insight emerging from their analyses is an
important, if familiar and unsurprising, one. There exists a basic ‘information
externality’ in that states that adopt new and experimental policies generate
valuable information for others. And this creates a standard sort of incentive
for free-riding. From this perspective, we might expect too little experimentation and policy innovation in a highly decentralized public sector. Indeed, as
Strumpf shows, it is unclear whether a centralized or decentralized outcome
will result in more policy innovation.23
The underprovision of experimentation at state and local levels can be
addressed through a system of subsidies to encourage these activities. And this
raises another point regarding existing welfare reform in the United States.
Under earlier programmes, federal aid took a matching form such that the
federal government effectively shared the costs and risks of new state-level
programmes. But under the new welfare reform measures, matching aid has
been replaced by block grants. This in itself serves to reduce incentives for
experimentation. There are some conflicting incentives here. On the one hand,
the new legislation gives the states broader scope for experimentation, but it
places the full cost of any new measures on the state with no sharing from the
centre. The net outcome on the amount of experimentation is thus a priori
unclear.
More generally, we need a lot more work on the implications of fiscal
decentralization for both the amount and kinds of policy experimentation and
innovation. As I have suggested, there are some clear and important cases
where innovation and experimentation at state and local levels have led to new
policy measures that have had broad national application. But it is much less
clear how we are to understand this experience in terms of the overall
effectiveness of a federal system in policy innovation.
Inter-jurisdictional competition and environmental
federalism: a challenge to the basic view
The preceding sections have set forth an economic conception of a federal
system. It is one in which the central government plays the major role in macroeconomic stabilization policies, takes the lead in redistributive measures for
support for the poor, and provides a set of national public goods. Decentralized
An essay on fiscal federalism 27
levels of government focus their efforts on providing public goods whose
consumption is limited primarily to their own constituencies. In this way,
they can adapt outputs of such services to the particular tastes, costs, and other
circumstances that characterize their own jurisdictions. The general idea of
decentralizing the provision of public services to the jurisdictions of concern
has been widely recognized. It manifests itself clearly on both sides of the
Atlantic. We see it in Europe under the nomenclature of the ‘principle of
subsidiarity,’ where it is explicitly enshrined in the Maastricht Treaty as a
fundamental principle for European union. In the United States, it often
appears more informally as an aversion to the ‘one size fits all’ approach.
Somewhat paradoxically, however, this view is the subject of a widespread and
fundamental challenge both at the theoretical and policy levels.
The source of this challenge is the claim that inter-jurisdictional competition among decentralized levels of government introduces serious allocative distortions. In their eagerness to promote economic development with
the creation of new jobs (so the argument goes), state and local officials tend to
hold down tax rates and, consequently, outputs of public services so as to
reduce the costs for existing and prospective business enterprise. This results
in a ‘race-to-the-bottom’ with sub-optimal outputs of public services.24
This argument has a substantial history, for example, George Break (1967)
made the case for the detrimental effects of inter-jurisdictional competition:
The trouble is that state and local governments have been engaged for
some time in an increasingly active competition among themselves for
new business. In such an environment government officials do not lightly
propose increases in their own tax rates that go much beyond those
prevailing in nearby states or in any area with similar natural attractions
for industry . . . Active tax competition, in short, tends to produce either a
generally low level of state-local tax effort or a state-local tax structure
with strong regressive elements.
(Break, 1967: 23–4)
Fear of losing local business and jobs thus leads to sub-optimal levels of state
and local public goods. Such competition can involve regulatory as well as
purely fiscal policies. John Cumberland (1979, 1981) has extended the Break
argument to encompass the setting of standards for local environmental
quality. In the Break spirit, Cumberland contends that state and local governments engage in ‘destructive interregional competition’. In order to attract
new business and to create jobs, public officials compete by reducing local
environmental standards to lower the costs of pollution control for firms that
locate within their borders. In this instance, inter-jurisdictional competition
leads to excessive environmental degradation. The implication of the Cumberland view is that national standards for environmental quality are needed to
prevent the excessive levels of pollution forthcoming under state and local
standard setting.
28 Wallace E. Oates
More recently, Alice Rivlin (1992) has echoed these views in her
‘rethinking of US federalism’. Although advocating an extensive devolution
of public-sector responsibilities to state and local government, Rivlin sees it as
almost axiomatic that competition among the states results in inadequate
levels of public services. Her remedy is a system of shared taxes under which
the revenues from a new national value-added tax would be shared among the
states. This, she argues, would free the states so that they would not have ‘to
worry so much about losing businesses to neighbouring states with lower tax
rates’ (p. 142).
This line of argument has proved quite powerful in the policy arena. There
are strong forces for the ‘harmonization’ of fiscal and environmental measures
in Europe that draw heavily on this proposition. Likewise, the case for the
‘race-to-the-bottom’ has provided basic support for the centralization of
environmental management in the United States.
What I want to stress here is the fundamental character of this challenge to
the basic model of fiscal federalism. The claim is that the decentralized
provision of public services is basically flawed; in the words of one recent US
observer, we need centralization in order to ‘Save the States from Themselves’
(Peter Enrich, 1996).25
But is this claim in fact true? This turns out to be a very complicated
question both in theoretical and empirical terms. There is now a substantial
theoretical literature that addresses this issue. In one set of papers, my
colleague Robert Schwab and I have developed a series of models that explore
the conditions under which horizontal competition among governments is
efficiency-enhancing (Oates and Schwab, 1988, 1991, 1996). It turns out that
it is straightforward to develop an analogue to perfect competition in the
private sector. In such a setting, governments compete with one another for a
mobile capital stock that both generates income for local residents and
provides a tax base for them and such competition leads local officials to adopt
efficient levels of outputs of public goods and tax rates. In these models, the
invisible hand works in much the same way as in the private sector to channel
policy decisions in individual jurisdictions into an efficient outcome from a
national perspective.
These models, moreover, are quite rich in terms of the variety of policy
instruments. Public officials provide not only outputs for local residents, but
public inputs that enhance the productivity of locally employed capital, and
environmental regulations that impose costs on local business and improve
local environmental quality. They finance these public outputs with a set of
taxes on local residents and capital. And there is no race to the bottom here.
Instead, jurisdictions find it in their own interest to charge benefit taxes that
lead to efficient decisions in both the public and private sectors.26
The problem is that these models make some strong assumptions. Let me
note three of them here: jurisdictions behave as price-takers in national or
international capital markets; public officials seek in their decisions to
maximize the welfare of their constituencies; and these officials have access to
An essay on fiscal federalism 29
the needed fiscal and regulatory policy instruments to carry out their programmes efficiently. It is not hard to show (or surprising to find) that
violations of any of these conditions can lead to distorted outcomes. Suppose,
for example, that local policy-makers are Niskanen-type agents that seek to
maximize, not the well-being of their constituencies, but rather the size of the
local public budget. It is then straightforward to show that they will set
excessively lax environmental standards in order to encourage a larger inflow
of capital so as to enlarge the local tax base (Oates and Schwab 1988). The
Oates-Schwab models provide a kind of baseline from which one can introduce
a range of quite plausible and realistic modifications that can be the source of
allocative distortions. A large number of papers explore outcomes either
where jurisdictions are sufficiently large to have some influence over the price
of capital or where local governments are restricted in their access to policy
instruments and must, for example, tax business and household capital at the
same rate. Many of these papers employ game-theoretic approaches in which
there is strategic interaction among the jurisdictions (Wildasin 1988). In such
settings, we find that outcomes can easily occur that involve sub-optimal
levels of public outputs.27
The theoretical literature thus generates some diverse findings on this
issue. There seem to be some basic efficiency-enhancing aspects of interjurisdictional competition, but there are clearly a range of ‘imperfections’ that
can be the source of allocative distortions. The real issue here is the magnitude
of these distortions. Are we dealing with minor deviations from efficient
outcomes or does such competition produce major welfare losses? The pure
theory can’t help us much in answering this question. Moreover, some of
the terminology is not very helpful. In particular, the description of interjurisdictional competition as involving a ‘race-to-the-bottom’ seems quite
misleading. Such a descriptive image may well be an effective rhetorical
device: it conjures up a vision of one jurisdiction cutting its tax rates and
lowering its environmental standards, only to be outdone by a neighbouring
jurisdiction, in a process that leads to a downward spiral to the ‘bottom’
(suggesting a very bad outcome indeed). However, the models that generate
these results are nothing of the sort. They are often game-theoretic models
that produce Nash equilibria with sub-optimal public outputs as the outcome.
What matters here is the extent of the sub-optimality. And the race-to-thebottom terminology tends to obscure this issue.
Unfortunately, we do not have many empirical studies to bring to bear on
this matter. There is a substantial descriptive literature addressing economic
competition among state and local governments in the United States, with
some interesting findings (Timothy Bartik, 1991). But this body of work
really does not shed much light on the normative question of whether such
competition is efficiency-enhancing or not (Paul Courant, 1994). In an interesting study that is of relevance, Anne Case, James Hines, and Harvey Rosen
(1993) find evidence of strategic interaction in state-level fiscal policies.
Using a similar methodology, Jan Brueckner (1998a) finds empirical support
30 Wallace E. Oates
for policy interdependence in the adoption of growth-control measures by
local governments in California. But at this juncture, I think it is fair to say
that the jury is still out on this matter. The welfare implications of interjurisdictional competition remain the subject of a lively ongoing debate with
a real need for further empirical work to supplement the large theoretical
literature. In my own view, the existing work is not sufficient to make a
compelling case for the abandonment of (or basic-amendment to) the
principle of fiscal decentralization. The case remains strong, it seems to me,
for leaving ‘local matters in local hands’. Moreover, as we shall see shortly,
there is another literature that takes’ a very different (and unambiguously
positive) view of the role of inter-jurisdictional competition.
Fiscal federalism: expanding the scope of the analysis
The normative framework for most of the literature in fiscal federalism (and
for my treatment in this essay as well) consists of the traditional principles of
welfare economics. From this perspective, institutions are evaluated in terms
of their impact on efficiency in resource allocation and the distribution of
income. However, the choice of a system of governance involves other values as
well the extent of political participation the protection of individual rights,
and the development of various civic virtues.
Political theorists throughout the ages have explored the ways in which
different political systems address these various objectives of the polity. In
addition, the vertical structure of government may have important implications for the way in which the public sector functions and its impact on the
operation of a system of markets. In this section, I want to explore some of the
new (and older) literature that addresses some broader implications of fiscal
federalism.
Economic and political objectives in a federal system
The first issue involves extending the conceptual horizon to encompass additional political objectives. What might this add to our more narrowly focused
economic view of fiscal federalism? Inman and Rubinfeld, in one strand of
their important new work on fiscal federalism have (and are) exploring this
issue in an attempt to redefine and extend the analytical framework to
encompass some of these additional political and constitutional dimensions of
public-sector structure. The approach of Inman and Rubinfeld (1997a, b and
c) explicitly incorporates certain political goals into a more extended objective
function. In such a setting, we find ourselves examining trade-offs between
such goals as economic efficiency and political participation. In one such
illustration, they present a ‘federalism frontier’ in which (over the relevant
range) increased political participation comes at the expense of economic
efficiency (1997a: 1230).
The basic presumption here is that more decentralized political systems are
An essay on fiscal federalism 31
conducive to increased citizen impact on political outcomes and political
participation. The evidence on this issue, in truth, is somewhat mixed, but
overall it suggests on balance ‘that both citizen influence and effort increase as
the size of government declines’ (1997a: 1215). The basic political objectives
thus strengthen the case for increased decentralization; they point to a system
that is more decentralized than one chosen simply on the grounds of an
exercise in economic optimization.
While this is suggestive at a general level, it raises the more difficult
question of how one addresses these trade-offs in the actual design of fiscal
institutions. How, for example, can we define and measure in a meaningful
way the marginal rate of substitution between economic efficiency and
political participation and incorporate this into the design of a political
system? To approach this question in a substantive way requires the study of
more specific issues. And here Inman and Rubinfeld (1997a) provide a
provocative beginning with a careful study of ‘anti-trust state-action
doctrine’. This involves an intriguing series of Supreme Court decisions (in
which state programmes that, had they been designed and introduced by
producers themselves, would have constituted a violation of anti-trust laws)
that were upheld on the basis of state legislative sovereignty. Although the
history of this doctrine is a complicated one, it is interesting that the Court has
seen fit to set aside, in certain instances, the presumed economic consequences
of certain state regulations in favor of decentralized political choices, so long
as they ‘were decided by an open, participatory political process, as evidenced
by state legislative involvement’ (1997a: 1252).
It seems unlikely that we can ever hope to quantify such trade-offs in a
formally satisfying way. But the Inman-Rubinfeld work does suggest that
careful analysis can certainly help to clarify the nature of the trade-offs involved
in the vertical design of the political system and allow economics to play a
broader role in the debate. It is interesting, moreover, that the political objectives seem, on the whole, to strengthen the case for fiscal decentralization.
Public-sector institutions: market-preserving federalism
An alternative approach to federalism, related to the ‘new institutional
economics,’ sees political decentralization in terms of its capacity to sustain a
productive and growing market economy. From this perspective, Barry Weingast (1995), Ronald McKinnon (1997a), and their colleagues have explored
the institutional structure of a system that promises to provide a stable
framework for a market system (see also McKinnon and Nechyba, 1997; Qian
and Weingast, 1997). Weingast’s point of departure is a ‘fundamental
political dilemma of an economic system,’ namely that ‘a government strong
enough to protect property rights and enforce contracts is also strong enough
to confiscate the wealth of its citizens’ (1995: 1).28
The attraction of federalism for Weingast is its potential for providing a
political system that can support an efficient system of markets. In a provocative
32 Wallace E. Oates
treatment, Weingast lays out a set of three conditions for a federal system that
characterize what he calls ‘market-preserving federalism’. These conditions
require that (1) decentralized governments have the primary regulatory
responsibility over the economy; (2) the system constitutes a common market
in which there are no barriers to trade; and (3) decentralized governments face
‘hard budget constraints’. By this last condition, Weingast means that lowerlevel governments have neither the capacity to create money nor access to
unlimited credit. And it implies further that the central government does not
stand ready to bail them out in instances of fiscal distress.
Weingast goes on to argue in historical terms that eighteenth-century
England and the United States in the nineteenth century were effectively such
systems of market-preserving federalism, and that this fostered in important
and fundamental ways the process of economic growth. It proved critical, argues
Weingast, to the Industrial Revolution in England and supported a system of
‘thriving markets’ in the United States throughout the nineteenth century.
McKinnon (1997a) has explored in more detail the importance of
Weingast’s last condition of a hard budget constraint. Crucial to this view is
the separation of monetary and fiscal powers. In a federal system, if the central
government controls the common currency, then lower-level governments
will be limited to fiscal instruments and will not have access to the ‘soft’
option of monetized debt, as McKinnon points out, state and local governments in the United States engage in extensive debt as finance for capital
projects. This makes good economic sense in terms of spreading the payments
for long-lived capital projects over their useful life. But they have no recourse
to public sources for funding this debt; they operate in private credit markets
just like private borrowers. These markets themselves, through the determination of credit ratings and other forms of monitoring fiscal performance,
create an environment in which the fiscal authorities must behave in
responsible ways.29 These markets, by creating a hard budget constraint in
terms of debt finance, have imposed a very useful discipline on decentralized
fiscal behaviour.30
More generally, a hard budget constraint implies that decentralized
governments must place a basic reliance on their own sources of revenues.
They must not be overly dependent on transfers from above. I discussed in an
earlier section the potential role for intergovernmental grants, but Weingast
and McKinnon (as well as others) remind us of the important discipline that
stems from self-financing. It is especially important that intergovernmental
grants not be expansible in the sense that recipients can turn to the grant
system to bail them out of fiscal difficulties (Wildasin, 1998b). In particular,
public authorities need to fund their own expenditures at the margin.31
The institutional perspective reminds us that there is more to the design of
a federal fiscal system than just the allocation of functions to the appropriate
levels of government. In addition, we need sets of formal and informal institutions that embody the rights sorts of incentives for public decision-makers
(Olson, 1990). These rules or procedures must make the costs of public
An essay on fiscal federalism 33
programmes as fully visible as their benefits in ways that make public officials
accountable for their decisions (Shah, 1998).
The treatment of fiscal structure in this section is not unrelated to Geoffrey
Brennan and James Buchanan’s (1980) view of fiscal decentralization as a
mechanism for controlling the size of the public sector. Drawing by analogy
on the conventional theory of monopoly in the private sector, they envision
the government sector as a monolithic agent, a ‘Leviathan,’ that seeks its own
aggrandizement through maximizing the extraction of tax revenues from the
economy. From this perspective, the design of the constitution and associated
institutions has as a major objective the placing of a set of constraints that
limits Leviathan’s access to tax and other fiscal instruments. Fiscal decentralization can, in their view, play a most important role in constraining public
sector growth. Competition among decentralized governments for mobile
economic units greatly limits the capacity of Leviathan to channel resources
into the public sector. As Brennan and Buchanan put it, competition among
governments in the context of the ‘inter-jurisdictional mobility of persons in
pursuit of “fiscal gains” can offer partial or possibly complete substitutes for
explicit fiscal constraints on the taxing power’ (1980: 184).32
The Brennan–Buchanan view suggests the hypothesis that the overall size
of the public sector ‘should be smaller, ceteris paribus, the greater the extent to
which taxes and expenditures are de-centralized’ (1980: 185). The evidence
for this hypothesis is, however, at best mixed. For example, I was unable to
find any systematic relationship between public-sector size and the extent of
fiscal decentralization (Oates, 1985). However, some later and more disaggregated studies have found some tendencies of this kind (See Oates, 1989 for a
survey of this work).
More generally, there is not much evidence on the relationship between
fiscal decentralization and economic performance. But there is some. Jeff
Huther and Anwar Shah (1996) at the World Bank have assembled a large and
diverse set of indices for eighty nations. These indices encompass a wide
variety of measures of economic and political structure and performance: quality
of governance, political freedom, political stability, debt-to-GNP ratios,
measures of income, the degree of equality in the distribution of income, and
many more.
In examining the statistical associations among these various indices, they
find in nearly every case a statistically significant and positive correlation
between increased decentralization and improved performance (either in
political or economic terms). There are obvious and important qualifications
here. Such associations do not prove causation. In particular, the degree of
fiscal decentralization is itself the outcome of a complex of political and
economic forces. Nonetheless, the initial results are suggestive and invite
further exploration. Elsewhere, Sang Loh Kim (1995), in an intriguing
econometric study making use of an international panel data set, has
estimated a Barro-type growth model. In addition to the usual explanatory
variables, he included a measure of fiscal decentralization that, in most of his
34 Wallace E. Oates
estimated equations, has a significant and positive partial association with the
rate of economic growth. Kim’s findings thus support Shah’s contention that
fiscal decentralization enhances economic performance – in this case, more
rapid economic growth. In contrast, Heng-fu Zou and his colleagues have
found a negative relationship between economic growth and fiscal decentralization in two studies, one examining a sample of forty-six countries over the
period 1970–89 (Davoodi and Zou, 1998) and the other a study of the growth
of provinces in China (Zhang and Zou, 1998). Much obviously remains to be
done at the empirical level in order to give us a better sense of the relationship
of fiscal decentralization to economic and political performance.
There is also much more to do at the conceptual level. While Weingast’s
initial forays into market-preserving federalism are certainly provocative,
they raise at least as many questions as they answer. It is fair, I think, to
characterize the analysis as fairly ‘loose’ at this stage. For example, are
Weingast’s conditions for market-preserving federalism to be regarded as
necessary or sufficient (or both) for an effective political foundation for a
private market economy? Jonathan Rodden and Susan Rose-Ackerman (1997)
have raised a number of probing questions concerning the Weingast analysis.
There is clearly much to chew on here. The next step, it seems to me, is to
attempt to formalize these relationships more explicitly so as to get a better
sense of how different political and budgetary institutions influence the
functioning of a market system. Finally, it is impossible to leave this section
without noting an obvious irony that has no doubt occurred to the reader. In
the earlier section on inter-jurisdictional competition, the central concern was
that such competition leads to too little in the way of public outputs. There it
was argued that competition for new firms and jobs may lead to public budgets
that are too small, and to overly lax environmental standards. In contrast, the
thrust of this section has been on the beneficial effects of competition as a
disciplining force that restrains the tendencies in the public sector towards
excessive spending and other forms of fiscal misbehaviour. One’s view of the
role of intergovernmental competition clearly depends on how one views the
operation of the public sector more generally!
Fiscal decentralization and economic development
When examining international cross-sectional data on intergovernmental
structure, one is immediately struck by the sharp contrast in the extent of
fiscal decentralization in the industrialized and developing countries. In a
study of my own involving a group of forty-three countries (Oates, 1985), the
sample statistics revealed an average share of central government spending in
total public expenditure of 65 per cent in the subsample of eighteen industrialized countries, as contrasted to 89 per cent in the subsample of twenty-five
developing nations. In terms of total public revenues, the central government
share for this same subsample of developing countries was over 90 per cent!
Although there are real concerns with the accuracy of some of these fiscal
An essay on fiscal federalism 35
data (Richard Bird, 1986), the general presumption that the developing
countries are characterized by relatively high degrees of fiscal centralization
seems firmly grounded. And this, moreover, is not something new. Writing
over forty years ago, Alison Martin and W. Arthur Lewis (1956) noted that
‘the weakness of local government in relation to central government is one of
the most striking phenomena of under-developed countries’ (p. 231). What
are we to make of this? Some observers attribute the poor economic performance of many of the developing countries in large measure to the failure of
central planning and make a strong case for the devolution of fiscal responsibilities. But the issue is clearly more complicated than this. In particular, the
question arises as to whether fiscal decentralization is a cause or a result of
economic development. Roy Bahl and Johannes Linn (1992), for example,
argue that as economies grow and mature, economic gains from fiscal
decentralization emerge. As they put it, ‘Decentralization more likely comes
with the achievement of a higher stage of economic development’ (p. 391); the
‘threshold level of economic development’ at which fiscal decentralization
becomes attractive ‘appears to be quite high’ (p. 393). From this perspective,
it is economic development that comes first; fiscal decentralization then
follows. But not all would agree. More generally, it seems to me, we must
regard intergovernmental structure as part of a larger political and economic
system that both influences and is determined by the interplay of a variety of
political and economic forces. It may well be that fiscal decentralization itself
has a real contribution to make to improved economic and political performance at different stages of development.
To gain further insight into this issue, we might turn to the historical
experience of the industrialized countries and examine the course of fiscal
decentralization through extended periods of economic growth. This, in fact,
does not prove to be very helpful. If we look at the United States, for example,
we find that in the late nineteenth century the public sector was both very
small and highly decentralized. At the turn of the century, the public sector
accounted for only about 8 per cent of GNP in the United States, while the
central government share of total public expenditure was around 30–35 per
cent. By 1955, the central government share of public spending had roughly
doubled from one-third to two-thirds.33 The fiscal records of other industrialized nations like Great Britain reveal roughly similar patterns.
The point is that the trend over this period of economic growth was not one
of increasing fiscal decentralization; it was just the reverse! It is worth noting,
however, that these centralizing tendencies seem to have played out around
the middle of the century. For most of the industrialized countries, fiscal
centralization ratios appear to have peaked in the decade of the 1950s, and
since that time, they have actually declined slightly in most cases (Oates, 1978;
Pommerehne, 1977). What typically seems to be taking place is a complicated
process of intergovernmental evolution. We see efforts at devolution in a
number of OECD countries accompanied, at the same time, by the emergence
of a new top layer of government in the European Union.
36 Wallace E. Oates
But all this may not have much relevance for the developing nations. This is
because they have a very different starting point for the growth process. As
Diana Conyers (1990) stresses, ‘most less developed countries inherited
relatively centralized systems of governments from their colonial powers, and
in the first years of independence there was often a tendency to maintain – if
not strengthen – central control and centralized systems of planning, in order
to encourage a sense of national unity and reinforce the new government and
its policies’ (p. 16). Thus, many of these countries entered upon nationhood
with highly centralized government sectors; they have not undergone anything
like the process of public-sector evolution experienced in the industrialized
countries.
The implication of all this is that the potential of fiscal decentralization for
improving economic and political performance must be evaluated in terms of
the specific circumstances that characterize the current state of a developing
nation. There remains, in my view and that of some others (Shah, 1994), a
strong case on traditional grounds for a significant degree of decentralization
in public-sector decision-making in the developing nations. This case, as we
have discussed, rests both on the potential economic gains from adapting
levels of public outputs to specific regional or local conditions and on the
political appeal of increased participation in governance. The economic case
has been made formally in purely static terms (as noted earlier in the treatment of the Decentralization Theorem), but it may well have some validity in
a dynamic setting of economic growth. Development policies that are sensitive to particular regional or local needs for infrastructure and even human
capital are likely to be more effective in promoting economic growth than are
centrally determined policies that largely ignore these geographical differences. There exists, incidentally, no formal theory of fiscal decentralization
and economic growth; it might be useful to set out such a theory, for a
framework that incorporates jurisdiction-specific investment programmes
might provide some insights into the parameters on which improved growth
performance depends.34
The prescriptive literature on fiscal structure for the developing countries
harks back directly to several of the points made in the preceding sections. In
particular, there is a heavy emphasis on reliance on own finance in order to
create hard budget constraints. This can have special relevance in the
developing country context, where decentralized governments often have very
limited access to their own major sources of tax and other revenues and are
heavily dependent on transfers from above. In some instances, provincial or
state governments may even have access to the public banking system to
absorb their debt issues. This predictably leads to large budgetary deficits and
both fiscal and monetary instability.
This literature makes reference to the problem of ‘vertical imbalance’,
meaning a disparity between different levels of government in their expenditure commitments and their access to revenues. Although the concept suffers
from certain ambiguities, it does focus attention on the important issue of the
An essay on fiscal federalism 37
widespread inadequacy of revenue sources at decentralized levels of government. The often heavy reliance of provincial, state, and local governments on
transfers from above undercuts incentives for responsible fiscal decision
making; fiscal decisions become outcomes of politically driven negotiations
between central and ‘local’ authorities, not the result of weighing benefits and
costs of prospective public programmes.
The case for establishing adequate and effective tax systems at decentralized
levels of government is one of the critical issues of fiscal federalism in the
developing world. And it is a truly challenging problem (Bahl and Linn,
1992; Bird, 1992). The earlier section dealing with the tax-assignment
problem set forth some of the properties of ‘good’ taxes at decentralized levels
of government. But provincial and local governments in developing countries
often face serious obstacles to the use of these tax bases. The scope, for
example, for using local property taxes is circumscribed in many instances by
the absence of the requisite institutions for tax administration. As Bahl and
Linn (1992) point out, there is typically more potential for such taxes in urban
than in rural areas in most developing countries. The obstacles are real, but
there are ongoing and extensive efforts to build up the administrative capacity
for more effective revenue systems.
Fiscal reform efforts in the developing world thus must focus on: (1)
restructuring systems of intergovernmental grants, in some instances to
reduce the extent of financing that they provide to decentralized levels of
government, and, more generally, to remove the perverse incentives that they
often embody for fiscal behaviour on the part recipients; (2) redesigning
revenue systems so as to provide decentralized levels of government a much
expanded access to own-revenues to finance their budgets and thereby reduce
their dependence on transfers from above; and (3) reviewing the use and
restrictions on debt finance to ensure that debt issues are not a ready way to
finance deficits on the current account. All three of these avenues of reform
contribute important ways to the establishment of a hard budget constraint,
but one that permits decentralized levels of government to do their job.
Finally, running through all these dimensions of fiscal reform is the crucial
attention to fiscal decision-making institutions and procedures themselves to
introduce mechanisms that provide incentives for public officials to act in the
public interest; this means largely, as Shah (1998) stresses, establishing
channels for accountability.35
In the interim, provincial and local governments cannot be left to fend
entirely for themselves; depending on the specific circumstances, there will
often be a need for significant transfers from the centre, especially to impoverished jurisdictions. But the general direction of needed reform seems
clear. The ongoing efforts to decentralize the public sectors of former socialist
states encounter much the same set of issues. But the problems are in some
ways even more complicated, inasmuch as the process of decentralization is
going on alongside a process of privatization; the complicated and sometimes
chaotic transition from a command economy to a market system does not provide
38 Wallace E. Oates
a stable environment within which to restructure the public sector. Nevertheless, a comprehensive process of fiscal decentralization is underway in
much of Central and Eastern Europe, and it involves the same issues of
defining the fiscal responsibilities of the different levels of government and
introducing the fiscal instruments and procedures needed both to support
emerging private markets and to deliver needed public services (Bird, Ebel,
and Wallich, 1995).
Some concluding observations
The evolution of the vertical structure of the public sector continues in interesting and novel ways. As I noted earlier, the first half of the twentieth century
was characterized by a strong trend toward increased fiscal centralization.
Indeed, some acute political observers in the nineteenth century forecast this
trend. de Tocqueville, writing in the first half of the nineteenth century,
predicted that ‘in the democratic ages which are opening upon us . . . centralization will be the natural government’ (1945, 2: 313). And nearer the end of
the century, Lord Bryce reiterated this forecast (at least for the United States).
After reviewing both the ‘centrifugal’ and ‘centripetal’ forces at work in
American government, Bryce concluded that while the centrifugal forces were
‘likely, as far as we can see, to prove transitory . . . the centripetal forces are
permanent and secular forces, working from age to age’ (1901, 2: 844). Bryce
then proceeded to forecast that ‘the importance of the States will decline as the
majesty and authority of the National government increase’ (1901, 2: 844).
Later, Edward McWhinney (1965) went on to generalize all this to what he
calls ‘Bryce’s Law,’ the proposition that ‘. . . federalism is simply a transitory
step on the way to governmental unity’ (p. 105).
But such forecasts have not been borne out. The second half of the twentieth
century has seen the extent of centralization in most of the industrialized
countries reach some sort of peak with a modest swing back in the direction of
devolution of public sector activity. There are, as Bryce suggests, important
forces working in both directions, and one can expect the net effect to move in
different ways as nations evolve over time. What does seem to be taking place
is a growing complexity and specialization in the vertical structure of the
public sector. Recent decades have seen the creation of special districts to
provide particular public services and the formation of metropolitan area
governments to bring centre cities and their suburbs into a single jurisdiction
(again for purposes of addressing specific needs such as transportation and
housing). It is especially striking to witness in the European Union the moves
toward devolution in many member countries, while, at the same time, it
develops a set of supranational institutions for governance and economic
management. Other countries, like South Africa and the former socialist
states, are struggling with their own sets of pressing issues in their attempts to
find effective mechanisms for political and fiscal decentralization. While the
existing literature in fiscal federalism can provide some general guidance on
An essay on fiscal federalism 39
these issues, my sense is that most of us working in the field feel more than a
little uneasy when proffering advice on many of the decisions that must be
made on vertical fiscal and political structures. We have much to learn!
Notes
1 This chapter first appeared in Journal of Economic Literature, 37, 1120–49. We are
grateful to JEL for its agreement to this paper being reprinted in this volume.
2 This economic use of the term ‘federalism’ is somewhat different from its standard
use in political science, where it refers to a political system with a constitution that
guarantees some range of autonomy and power to both central and decentralized
levels of government. For an economist, nearly all public sectors are more or less
federal in the sense of having different levels of government that provide public
services and have some scope for de facto decision-making authority (irrespective of
the formal constitution). In retrospect, it seems to me that the choice of the term
‘fiscal federalism’ was probably an unfortunate one, since it suggests a narrow
concern with budgetary matters. The subject of fiscal federalism, as I suggest
above, encompasses much more, namely the whole range of issues relating to the
vertical structure of the public sector.
3 It is straightforward to show that a system of decentralized poor relief is
characterized by a garden-variety externality that results in sub-optimal levels of
support for the poor. More specifically, increases in support payments in one
jurisdiction confer external benefits in the form of a reduced number of poor
households elsewhere. On this, see Charles Brown and Oates (1987). There is,
moreover, evidence for the United States that state-level decisions on levels of
welfare support are interdependent; Luz Amparo Saavedra (1998), among others,
finds that states have responded to decreases (increases) in benefit levels in other
states by reducing (raising) their own benefits to welfare recipients. For an
excellent survey of this whole issue, see Jan Brueckner (1998b).
4 However, Martin Feldstein and Marian Vaillant Wrobel (1998) present some
recent evidence suggesting that state government attempts to redistribute income
are largely unsuccessful. They find that progressive state income taxes in the
United States have had little impact on the net-of-tax relative wage rates of skilled
versus non-skilled workers. Their claim is that the mobility of workers across state
borders undoes efforts at redistribution and does so very quickly. The result is no
redistribution, only deadweight losses from inefficient locational decisions.
5 For two useful treatments of the assignment of specific public services to the
appropriate level of government, see Anwar Shah (1994, chapter 1) and Ronald
McKinnon and Thomas Nechyba (1997).
6 In Europe, proponents of fiscal decentralization refer to the ‘principle of
subsidiarity’. The precept here is that public policy and its implementation should
be assigned to the lowest level of government with the capacity to achieve the
objectives. This principle has been formally adopted as part of the Maastricht
Treaty for European Union. Its intellectual roots, interestingly, are found in
twentieth-century Catholic social philosophy. On this see Robert Inman and
Daniel Rubinfeld (forthcoming).
7 In tax analysis, we are accustomed to a quite different result: the deadweight loss
varies directly with the price elasticity of demand. Here it is just the reverse, since
the distortion takes place on the quantity, rather than the price, axis. But
interestingly, if the source of the difference in efficient local outputs is cost
differentials, then the gains from fiscal decentralization bear the opposite
relationship to the case where their source is differences in levels of demand: these
gains then vary directly with the price elasticity of demand (Oates, 1998).
40 Wallace E. Oates
8 For surveys of this econometric literature, see Rubinfeld (1987) and Oates (1996a).
For an attempt to actually measure the welfare gains from decentralization, see
David Bradford and Oates (1974); they find large gains.
9 Another interesting case is the setting of federal standards for safe drinking water.
After mandating a set of standards for the quality of drinking water to be met in all
jurisdictions in the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974, the federal government has
backed off and now allows a range of exceptions in recognition of the large interjurisdictional differences in per-capita costs of meeting the standards (US
Congressional Budget Office, 1997).
10 In certain settings, mobility can itself be a source of distorted outcomes. See, for
example, the seminal paper by Frank Flatters, Vernon Henderson, and Peter
Mieszkowski (1974).
11 There is a lively and important debate in the local finance literature over whether
or not local property taxation, as employed in the United States, constitutes
benefit taxation. Bruce Hamilton (1975, 1976) and William Fischel (1992) make
the case that local property taxes combined with local zoning ordinances produce
what is effectively a system of benefit taxation. Peter Mieszkowski and George
Zodrow (1989) take the opposite view.
12 See Inman and Rubinfeld (1996) for an excellent restatement and extension of the
Gordon analysis. David Wildasin (1988) provides a valuable survey of the various
implications of factor mobility both for economic efficiency and for the
redistributive impact of public policy.
13 Resident-based taxes (also called ‘destination-based taxes’) are levies on factors of
production (such as land, labour, and capital) based on the owner’s residence and
on goods and services based on the residence of the consumer. In contrast, sourcebased taxes (or ‘origin taxes’) involve taxing factors where they are employed and
goods and services where they are purchased. Under resident-based taxation,
governments have much less capacity to export the incidence of their taxes onto
economic units elsewhere. Source-based taxes, however, are often easier to
administer and, in certain forms, tend to be more commonly used by state and
local governments.
14 Matching grants (possibly negative) can, in principle, also serve to correct some of
the distortions associated with the decentralized use of non-benefit taxes (Gordon,
1983).
15 Fiscal equalization can also make use of matching grants. If the objective of the
equalization programme is to equalize taxable capacity, the granting government
may choose to supplement the revenue base of fiscally poorer jurisdictions by
matching any revenues they collect by some specified per centage. Such a measure
has the potential of allowing jurisdictions to raise the same tax revenues per-capita
for a given tax rate (irrespective of the actual size of their tax base). This form of
fiscal equalization is sometimes called ‘power equalization’ and has received
some attention in the United States for state programmes to achieve various equity
goals – most notably in the area of school finance (e.g., Feldstein 1975; Nechyba
1996).
16 The issue here is that from the perspective of redistributing income from rich to
poor, equalizing intergovernmental grants are bound to have some perverse
effects. For such grants, although transferring income from wealthy to poor on
average, will inevitably result in some income transfers from poor individuals who
reside in wealthy jurisdictions to rich persons in generally poor areas. In this sense,
such equalizing measures are not as effective as programmes that redistribute
income from rich to poor individuals. But a society may well wish, for other
reasons, to provide additional support for the provision of local public services
(such as schools) in relatively low-income areas (e.g., Inman and Rubinfeld, 1979).
17 As Boadway and Flatters (1982) have shown, equalizing grants may be required to
An essay on fiscal federalism 41
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
offset distorting locational incentives where some jurisdictions offer pecuniary
fiscal advantages to potential residents resulting, for example, from large, taxable
natural resource endowments.
This argument has even more force where, as in some developing countries and
emerging democracies, provincial and local governments simply lack the capacity
for effective tax administration. In this setting, central transfers and/or the
piggybacking of supplementary rates on top of centrally administered taxes may
be the only realistic options. See, for example, Inman (forthcoming).
As Inman and Rubinfeld (1996) point out, the prescriptive theory of grants
presumes a central planner or political process that ‘will select socially preferred
policies’ (p. 325). However, the public-choice literature makes clear the potential
of central government political mechanisms to make inefficient choices
concerning policies that affect various groups differently. In addition, a grantdistributing agency may have its own objectives; for an excellent study of how such
objectives can influence the pattern of grants, see Chernick (1979).
For surveys and interpretations of this literature, see Gramlich (1977), Ronald
Fisher (1982) and Oates (1994).
For an excellent and recent review of this whole debate in a historical context, see
Therese McGuire (1997). Rebecca Blank (1997) provides a concise and insightful
treatment of the new welfare legislation and its potential implications.
For a concurring view, see Craig Volden (1997).
The Rose-Ackerman and Strumpf analyses, incidentally, also produce a number of
subtle and more surprising results. Strumpf finds, for example, that a state with a
higher expected return from experimentation can have a lower propensity to
experiment.
Competition may also take place between different levels of government. On such
‘vertical competition’ (as well as horizontal competition) see Albert Breton (1998).
There is, incidentally, a very extensive, interesting, and lively debate on this
matter among legal scholars. Recent issues of the law journals are full of papers on
inter-jurisdictional competition and its consequences. See, for example, Richard
Revesz (1992) and Daniel Esty (1996).
I should emphasize here that all public outputs (including environmental quality)
are entirely local in these models; there are no spillover effects into other
jurisdictions. The analysis, incidentally, extends not only to fiscal instruments,
but regulatory ones as well (such as environmental standards). The analysis of
‘regulatory federalism’ is, in principle, analogous to that of fiscal federalism. The
same general principles concerning decentralization apply to fiscal and regulatory
instruments.
See John Wilson (1996) for an excellent survey of this literature.
However, as Martin McGuire and Mancur Olson (1996) have shown, even a selfaggrandizing autocrat (if secure) has powerful incentives for supporting an
economically efficient system.
James Poterba and Kim Rueben (1997), for example, have found that those states
with tighter anti-deficit rules, and more restrictive limitations on the authority of
the state legislature to issue debt, pay lower rates of interest on their bonds.
McKinnon (1997b) has gone on to argue that much of the impetus for European
Monetary Union has as its source a collectively imposed budgetary retrenchment.
His interesting argument is that European decision-makers, realizing that they
cannot achieve fiscal stability with continued access to monetary powers, are
seeking through EMU to create the hard budget constraints that are the
prerequisite for responsible fiscal management.
This is subject to the qualification that matching grants may be needed to
internalize inter-jurisdictional spillover benefits.
In a more formal treatment of this matter, Dennis Epple and Allan Zelenitz (1981)
42 Wallace E. Oates
have shown that while competition among jurisdictions can constrain government
rent-seeking behaviour, it cannot altogether eliminate it.
33 See Wallis and Oates (1998) for a description and analysis of the evolution of
American federalism in the twentieth century.
34 Some observers, like Remy Prud’homme (1995), argue that the case for fiscal
decentralization has been much exaggerated. Prud’homme claims that many of the
premises of the fiscal federalism vision are typically not satisfied in the developingcountry setting; decentralized government bodies, he argues, are frequently
unresponsive to the needs of their constituencies and manifest widespread
corruption.
35 See Govinda Rao (1998) for an illuminating treatment in the Indian context of the
wide range of mechanisms (or ‘subterranean transfers’ as he calls them) through
which central government subsidizes the states.
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2
The political economy of EMU
and the EU Stability Pact
Ralph Rotte
Introduction
The problem of fiscal discipline in democracies
A typical problem of democratic political systems is their tendency to spend
money on behalf of lobbies and interest groups in exchange for their supporting or at least tolerating the government. As a result, public deficits occur
which may have serious economic consequences, for example, by causing
higher interest rates and crowding out of investment, increased future tax
burdens in order to cover the debt, and a lower scope of public activity due to
rising shares of interest payments in the budget. High fiscal deficits, at least if
persistent or rising, are thus considered a negative effect of politics in the
mainstream economic literature.
There is a vast range of theoretical explanations and empirical studies
explaining and demonstrating the democratic tendency toward a lack of fiscal
discipline. In his seminal work on the logic of collective action, for example,
Olson (1965; 1982) has shown that interest groups establishing distributional
coalitions may lead to slow decision-making processes and thus to serious
structural opposition against economic reform (Alesina and Drazen, 1991).
Interest organization tends to create many special interest groups advocating
large excess burdens and leads to a variety of cartels and inflexible institutions,
hampering economic growth and deteriorating economic performance (Olson,
1984; 1995). Consequently, governments slowly lose their ability to finance
lobbyist fiscal programmes while reductions of the programmes are prevented
by crowded bargaining agendas of a multiplicity of interest groups.
In addition, public choice theory (e.g. Buchanan et al., 1980; Tollison,
1982) has explained how rent-seeking behaviour leads to an increase of public
deficits since politicians act as agents for interest groups aiming at receiving
rents by monopolies created by legislation or by deficit-financed programmes.
This is especially relevant in weak coalitions, governments depending on the
consensus of the participating parties which each represent a special array of
interest groups (Roubini and Sachs, 1989; Alesina and Tabellini, 1990). As
elections provide the only potential constraint for politicians, it is important
that voters do not recognize the inter-temporal burdens resulting from such
Political economy of EMU and EU Stability Pact 49
policies (e.g. Alesina and Perotti, 1995). According to the political business
cycle approach, ignorant voters may vote for an incumbent government if
public spending is increased before the election (e.g. Alesina, Cohen and
Roubini, 1993).
Four options of securing fiscal restraint
So how may the problem of persistent deficits in democracies be solved in
order to provide a stable fiscal framework for economic activity? Basically, one
may distinguish four approaches. First, political behaviour may change due to
a widespread conviction among decision-makers and voters that fiscal
discipline is important and has to be maintained despite the pressure of
lobbies. This is the approach that the United States has seemed to follow since
about the end of the Cold War. Obviously the main weakness of such an
approach to fiscal stabilization is its dependence on ideological factors which
are not irrevocable. The inter-temporal stability of a commitment to fiscal
stability based solely on convictions of the political majority is therefore
somewhat doubtful since majorities and governments as well as ideological
fashions may change in time.
Thus, a second approach tries to strengthen the commitment by conviction
by codifying it in national law. Ordinary laws or even constitutional rules not
only create a formal responsibility of the government to meet more or less
balanced budget targets. They are also relatively hard to change since they
require formal legislative procedures and possibly especially high majorities
(in the case of constitutional change). Nevertheless, as experiences with, for
example, the US Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Law of 1985–87 or art. 115 of
the German Basic Law have shown (Niskanen, 1990; Bach, 1993; Eichengreen
and Bayoumi, 1994; Gramlich, 1995), there are two important shortcomings
of this method. First, even those rules are obviously not unchangeable, and at
least ordinary laws may in principle be reversed by simple majority-voting,
which may again depend on possible changes of convictions. Second, and more
importantly, interpretation and actual enforcement of legal rules, especially
constitutional articles, are subject to dynamic processes and may change in
time even if the rules remain formally unchanged.
A third way to enforce fiscal discipline is therefore to deprive national authorities of their power to make the rules of their own behaviour. International
agencies, like the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank, may tie
their economic help for countries to governmental commitments to fiscal
stability and reform, and enforce those commitments by threatening to withdraw credits or other forms of support (Frey and Eichenberger, 1994; Rodrik,
1996). However, while this principle of external coercion may work in the case
of politically and economically weak regimes with badly organized interest
groups, for example, in relatively powerless countries of the developing world,
it is very unlikely to be accepted by stronger sovereign states. It seems
therefore inapplicable to the problem of fiscal restraint in industrialized
50 Ralph Rotte
countries like the United States or in Western Europe where lobbies and
interest groups are well organized on the national level.
Moreover, the European Union which, as a supranational organization,
might seem the right institution to create some external pressure on national
fiscal policies in the case of its member states, is not a more or less independent
body like the International Monetary Fund. Here, national governments,
through their representation in the Council, can actually influence EU rules,
and economic coercion from outside is ruled out by their well-established
economic positions as well as by national veto power on crucial issues.
Nevertheless, the European Union provides a unique example for a fourth
option to introduce and maintain fiscal discipline: international commitment
among equals, where common rules establish a kind of division of labour
between a collective international organization and national governments
(Vaubel, 1986). This is the principle of a linkage approach on which we will
focus for the rest of this chapter.
Linking domestic politics and international commitment
The domestic–foreign affairs nexus
When it comes to the linkage of domestic and foreign policy, international
relations scholars or international political economists often model two-level
games of diplomacy and domestic politics. Following Putnam’s (1988)
seminal paper, these models generally interpret foreign policy actors as being
constrained by the necessity to convince the domestic audiences of their moves
abroad and to win support for the ratification of international agreements and
obligations (e.g. Schoppa, 1993; Mo, 1994; Sakamoto, 1994). In other words,
this approach implies a domestic-foreign policy nexus which is based on a
certain primacy of foreign policy vis-à-vis domestic issues, with domestic feedback being an inconvenient though unavoidable restriction of government
activity.
International commitment, however, is also a well-known way for governments to divert national public opinion from domestic problems (e.g. Smith,
1996). As theoretical and empirical work in the literature has shown,
democratic governments tend to pursue a more risky foreign policy when
facing potential failure in upcoming elections. In order to stay in power,
governments might even wage diversionary wars causing some national rallyround-the-flag effect which in general favours the incumbent leaders of a
country (e.g. Levy, 1992; Hess and Orphanides, 1995). One way to cope with
economic difficulties at home, such as rising unemployment or lagging
growth, is thus to increase activity abroad.
Contrary to the former approach, this political economy perspective of
foreign affairs assumes domestic issues as main interests of national leaders
aiming at retention of their powers and positions. Apart from more or less
‘wag the dog’-style operations, however, there is a second possibility of using
Political economy of EMU and EU Stability Pact 51
foreign affairs as a quasi-instrument of domestic politics in situations
unfavourable for the government. It may hint at international constraints on
national policy and thus ascribe responsibility for its problems with, for
example, the economy, to some foreign externality or international institution
as mentioned above. Obviously, creating such foreign externalities by international agreements or using existing commitments can then be a valuable
instrument for ruling élites to overcome the domestic stalemate based on
distributive alliances and interest group lobbying preventing economic
reform. When confronted with the public outrage caused by the implementation of austerity measures, a government may then bypass domestic
criticism and avoid some of its negative consequences at the ballot box by
emphasizing the legally and morally binding obligations within the country’s
international partnerships and alliances.
This mechanism may work because of the particularities of foreign policy.
The average voter’s knowledge about international affairs may be considered
very limited, and a nation’s international ties and reputation belong to the
highest valued political assets for most political parties and the electorate.
Therefore internationalization of domestic problems may provide an
opportunity to implement unpopular but seemingly necessary measures while
at the same time presenting a scapegoat other than the government itself from
being blamed.
The principle of delegation in European integration
The scapegoat effect of international commitment has long been at the core of
the political economy view of European integration (Martin, 1994). Vaubel
(1986) discusses several examples where the European Community has established some expertise in doing the ‘dirty work’ for national governments, for
example, subsidization of agriculture, protectionism, or control and enforcement of industrial cartels. By transferring competences to the European
Community/European Union national governments have thus been able to
circumvent domestic resistance which might have had negative consequences
for their popularity.
Moreover, Olson (1982) or Crafts and Toniolo (1995), for example, have
shown that the transfer of regulative authority to European institutions (in
which national governments have still the biggest influence on decisions) was
a major element of economic growth in Europe after 1945. Europeanizing
decision-making broke the grip of national redistributional coalitions that
had developed in the member countries. According to Peirce (1991), the 1992
Common Market programme has had the same effect.
Following this point of view, the fiscal criteria of EMU have built on a
rather well-established mechanism which serves to overcome Olson’s logic of
collective action in the field of economic reform. This is especially relevant in
the case of the fiscal deficit rules which limit deficit spending as a main
instrument of meeting the wishes of political interest groups and lobbies.
52 Ralph Rotte
The political economy of EMU
The basic idea of the political economy of EMU, as far as the overall commitment to fiscal discipline is concerned, is thus a special mechanism which
allows national governments to follow a policy of fiscal reform and austerity
by shifting off responsibility to the European Union. This mechanism is based
on two central elements: an international agreement or treaty among the member states (governments) that has been adopted by the national parliaments,
and a special attitude of the public, i.e. the voters, vis-à-vis international or, for
that matter, supranational affairs.
Parliamentary acceptance of a treaty imposing serious restrictions on
national monetary and fiscal policy, like the Maastricht Treaty on European
Union of 1991, may be explained easily by political motives other than purely
economic ones: the aim of depriving the Bundesbank of its power in European
monetary policy; of keeping reunited Germany in the dense framework of cooperative European networks; of progressing on the way toward a stronger,
united Europe capable to take its stand in global affairs, for example, against
the United States, Japan or China, and so on. Apart from a generally positive
attitude of political élites toward restrictive fiscal policy, the whole range of
typical considerations in international affairs, from national status in a
globalized world to basic interests of security and power is relevant in this
respect (Garrett, 1994). Of course, the political and economic influence of
crucial countries in the Union, like Germany or France, also played a role in
concluding the Maastricht Treaty, leading to some special weight of national
economic ideologies (like the traditional German longing for low inflation)
and forcing the partner countries to accept relatively strong commitments
like the supplementary Stability and Growth Pact of 1996 in order to secure
the overall project of EMU.
Given that there have been some sensible reasons for national governments
and parliaments to agree to the Maastricht Treaty creating EMU and a selfcommitment to fiscal stability, there remains the question of why the
electorate should accept it with its economic implications and restrictive
consequences on fiscal and social policy. Why should a national government
that has taken part in the international decision-making process of an EU
treaty (which needs unanimity to be concluded) be able to attribute the
negative consequences of the agreement mainly to the collective international,
seemingly anonymous body of the Union? A standard argument given in the
literature is the voters’ ignorance of international affairs and a lack of information about the actual political structures of the European Union (e.g.
Vaubel, 1994b). Nevertheless, given the intense public discussion about the
Maastricht Treaty in the early 1990s, it seems too simple to count on a simple
deception effect on public opinion by introducing a Maastricht scapegoat for
restrictive fiscal policy into national politics.
Therefore another explanation for the different perception of purely national
and internationally backed economic policy takes account of the fundamental
Political economy of EMU and EU Stability Pact 53
public support of European integration. Empirical findings by Gabel and
Palmer (1995) have shown that support for the European Union depends on
the political aim of international stability and national security rather than on
economic performance. According to Anderson and Kaltenthaler (1996),
economic well-being is less important for supporting the Union than the
duration of a country’s membership. Even Vaubel (1994a) concludes that there
is some process of gradual acceptance of membership in the Union, independent of the actual economic situation.
Following Rotte (1998) and Rotte and Zimmermann (1998), one may therefore explain the dampening effect of Europeanizing restrictive policy measures
on domestic resistance by the electorate’s fundamentally positive attitude
toward European integration. Since support for the European Union depends
on a variety of factors, among which economic ones may not be the most
important, the economic costs of a European project may be accepted easier
than those of a national one. Consequently, transferring the political cause for
fiscal restraint from national governments to the Union by defining EU rules
for public deficits results in a discount of the political costs governments have
to face at home, provided that the basic political attitude of the public vis-à-vis
the European Union is sufficiently positive. The Danish referendum on the
euro of 2000 indirectly supports this argument: The Danes refused to join the
EMU not because of economic aspects but rather because of some fundamental
scepticism concerning political unification (Schumacher and Schymik, 2000).
Finally, there is another specialty of this way of securing commitments to
national fiscal discipline by international agreement. Since an international
treaty not only requires unanimity to be concluded but to be changed as well,
collective commitments like the Maastricht Treaty also bind subsequent
national governments. The principle of unanimity basically means that every
participant in the agreement can be sure that their partners will keep to the
principle since they are not able to redefine it without their consent (Buchanan
and Tullock, 1962). Thus, despite changes in governments, like in France,
Great Britain or Germany in the late 1990s, the overall commitment remains
untouched, and international institutional ties contribute to its persistent credibility, even if its fulfillment becomes more difficult than expected (North, 1993).
The institutional framework of EMU and the
EU Stability Pact
The Maastricht provisions for EMU
Eichengreen (1994; 1998) provides an overview of the institutional rules for
EMU given by the Maastricht Treaty of 1991. The criteria for joining EMU
and the rules applicable within monetary union are laid down in articles 99 to
124 of the Treaty on the European Community (TEC) in its consolidated version
of 1997 (after the Maastricht and Amsterdam summits). The central norm for
fiscal policy is art. 121 in connection with art. 104 TEC and art. 2 of the
54 Ralph Rotte
Protocol on the Convergence Criteria (PCC), which rules that the budget deficit
of a country willing to join EMU must not exceed 3 per cent of the nominal
GDP in the year before the decision on qualification, and has to remain permanently on such a level. Additional requirements of EMU membership concern
low inflation, stable European Exchange Rate Mechanism (EERM) membership, and convergence of long-term interest rates in EERM (art. 121 TEC).
In order to provide sufficient incentives even for countries which might fail
the exact meeting of the deficit criterion, the Maastricht Treaty includes some
flexibility. Decisions about EMU membership are taken by the EU Council
with a qualified majority, i.e. not unanimously, and may also take into account
the previous efforts of a country to reduce public deficits as well as extraordinary economic circumstances preventing further decreases. Moreover,
contrary to the inflation and interest rate targets, the decision about meeting
the deficit criterion requires an additional decision-making process according
to art. 104 TEC. Based on a report and recommendation by the generally prointegration EU Commission, the Council decides (again with a qualified
majority) whether a country has an excessive public deficit. European Union
states not meeting the deficit criterion thus gain some additional bargaining
opportunities within the Commission as well as in the Council. For, according
to art. 2 PCC, the deficit criterion of art. 121 TEC has to be considered as met
if there has been no approval of an excessive deficit.
Concerning the fiscal deficit criterion of EMU membership the Maastricht
procedures have thus given most countries a credible chance to join in due
time, which is a prerequisite for domestic reliability of the Europeanization
argument for fiscal restraint. The lack of any veto power by single member
countries (like Germany) and the actual formal flexibility of the 3 per cent
benchmark may help governments to implement austerity measures by hinting at the institutionalized hope for convincing the other EU countries that
one’s own fiscal policy matches the standards of the collective economic policy.
The Stability and Growth Pact
The provisions of the Maastricht Treaty for joining EMU were of course
especially relevant in 1997–98 when monetary union was actually established. One has to note, however, that according to art. 104 TEC, not only
member countries of EMU but all EU countries have committed themselves
to fiscal stability according to the Maastricht criterion. In order to secure
actual compliance with this self-commitment and also political acceptance of
EMU in the German public, a collective budget surveillance system was
established in 1996–97, which became effective in 1999. Since collective
warrancy of national debts and government borrowing from the European
Central Bank are precluded by art. 103 and art. 101 TEC respectively, the
main economic aim of the Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) is to avoid collective burdens via rising interest rates caused by national deficit spending.
Formally, the SGP consists of the relevant decision of the European Council
Political economy of EMU and EU Stability Pact 55
(1997) of Amsterdam of 1996 and two additional ordinances by the EU
Council on budget surveillance and procedures in case of an excessive deficit of
1997 (Council of the European Union, 1997a; 1997b). The collective surveillance mechanism of SGP is based on three elements: the medium-term early
warning system, the short-term observation of national budget programmes,
and the excessive budget procedure.
The early warning system consists basically of the compulsory presentation
of annual stability programmes by the EMU member countries and of convergence programmes by the other EU countries. These official programmes
are addressed to the Council of EU finance ministers (ECOFIN), the EU
Economic and Financial Committee (EFC) with two representatives from each
member state, the Commission and the ECB (art. 114 TEC), and the European
Commission. They contain the states’ medium-term budget plans, which
have to aim at a balanced budget or even budget surpluses. The reports have to
provide the basic assumptions of budgetary planning as well as the relevant
measures of fiscal and economic policy. Moreover, the sensitivity of the plan
vis-à-vis changes in the assumptions have to be explained. The period to be
covered by the reports is five years, starting with the previous one. Supported
by the ECB, the Commission and the EFC compile a comment on the programmes and present it to ECOFIN. The Council then decides within two
months if the medium-term budget aims contain an adequate margin of
security to prevent an excessive deficit of 3 per cent of GDP, if the plan’s
assumptions are realistic and if the planned measures provide for a stable
budgetary development. If this is not the case, the country has to revise its
planning and report. Potential deviations from fiscal stability and discipline
are thus to be recognized and tackled early.
Short-term surveillance is provided by semi-annual reports of current
national budget data (on 1 March and on 1 September). The Commission and
the EFC examine separately if there is an excessive budget deficit. This is the
case if at least one of two criteria is met: the budget deficit is higher than 3 per
cent of GDP, or the debt ratio is higher than 60 per cent of GDP or is not
approaching this point of reference with adequate speed. If an excessive deficit
has been identified or if it is expected, the procedure for an excessive deficit
according to art. 104 TEC is initiated.
In this procedure, the Commission and the EFC first present their considerations to ECOFIN which decides with a qualified majority of votes if there is
in fact an excessive deficit or not. It is crucial for this decision if there are any
exceptional circumstances justifying a higher deficit. Such exceptions are
natural disasters, a solely temporary character of the deficit, or a recession. A
recession is operationalized by a reduction of GDP within a year. A reduction
of less than 0.75 per cent is defined as not exceptional, if it is higher than 2 per
cent it is generally accepted as such. Between these two reference values the
Council decides, considering the position of the afflicted country as well as
the suddenness and the cumulative effect of the shock, which are also part of
the Commission’s report.
56 Ralph Rotte
If the Council concludes that there is in fact an excessive deficit, the
instruments of art. 104 (7) to (11) TEC come to bear. The Council first gives
some confidential advice to the country, which may be made public after a set
deadline. If the country does not follow the Council’s proposals, ECOFIN may
impose detailed measures in order to reduce the deficit. If the country still
does not comply with these directions, the Council may inflict sanctions to
enforce the implementation of the consolidation measures. These include the
need to give additional information when emitting government bonds,
revisions in the lending policies of the European Investment Bank, the obligation to give a deposit bearing no interest to the Union, and the imposition of
fines. The period between the provision of the budgetary data and the decision
on potential sanctions is only ten months.
The first deposit consists of a fixed part of 0.2 per cent of GDP and a
variable part of a tenth of the difference between the actual deficit quota of the
previous year and 3 per cent. If Britain and Germany had both had a deficit of
3.5 per cent in 1999, then their hypothetical deposits would have been about
euro 1.3 trillion × 0.01 × (0.2 + 0.1 × 0.5) = euro 3.25 billion and euro 1.9
trillion × 0.01 × 0.25 = euro 4.75 billion, respectively. This shows that potential sanctions are not neglectable. Additional deposits in subsequent years are
restricted to the flexible part. If fiscal policy is not corrected according to the
directions given by the Council the deposit is changed to a fine which is not
refunded after lifting the sanctions by ECOFIN. Due to their formal reservations to the Maastricht Treaty, this mechanism of sanctions will apply to the
United Kingdom and Denmark only after their having joined EMU.
Potential problems of credibility
Under certain assumptions, governments have strong incentives to commit
themselves and to stick to the stability pact if they are already members of
EMU (Artis and Winkler, 1998; Beetsma and Uhlig, 1999). Nevertheless,
there still remain some potential problems concerning the actual credibility of
the commitment to fiscal discipline as laid down in TEC and SGP. One issue is
the possibility to manipulate the indicators relevant for joining EMU by
short-term policy measures. Concerning the membership of Greece, for
example, which was agreed upon in 2000, there has been some criticism about
the Greek government lowering indirect taxes temporarily in order to meet
the Maastricht inflation criterion, as well as doubts about the persistence of
fiscal restraint, given that Greece receives massive transfers of about 3 to 4 per
cent of its GDP from the Union (DIW, 2000; Papaschinopoulou, 2000).
Nevertheless, Greece is an excellent example for the political economy
mechanism of EMU, since, without a doubt, it has made some vast progress in
reforming its public finances for several years, and the hardships of this way
were buffered by the prospect to be part of a more closely integrated Europe
(DIW, 2000; Herz and Kotios, 2000).
The problem of persistence of fiscal discipline after having reached the goal
Political economy of EMU and EU Stability Pact 57
of EMU is of course at the heart of SGP. As far as institutions and sanction
mechanisms are concerned the provisions for long-term fiscal restraint seem as
well established as possible within an international regime. The international
character of the commitment, however, does not solve one fundamental
problem of every form of self-restraint once and for all. It is still the potential
breakers of the rules, i.e. the national states, that decide about their own deeds
in the Council (Lowe, 1999). Therefore there remains some tinge with the
SGP mechanisms.
On the other hand, there are three additional elements of warranty in the
present TEC and SGP regimes. First, it is institutions independent of the
governments, i.e. the Commission and the ECB, that play an important role
in observing national policies and preparing the foundations of Council
decisions on excessive deficits. Since the Commission typically is not only prointegrationist but also interested in maintaining the internal stability of
integration, it is less likely that it will be prepared to bargain about the deficit
issue once a country has actually joined EMU. Moreover, the ECB has already
established some reputation of reliable orientation towards monetary stability
which includes a critical attitude vis-à-vis national fiscal policies. Second, the
Maastricht process seems to have caused, or at least supported, the establishment of some kind of culture of stability to which even socialist governments,
which are said to tend to deficit spending, adhere. At least this is the impression one gains from looking at the incumbent British, French and German
governments. Third, even if the governments again wanted to change their
points of view, their actual space to manoeuver is limited since, in the process
of negotiating EMU and especially SGP, most aspects were codified and can
basically be changed only unanimously. Although there is still room for
interpretation, the key elements of fiscal discipline have been laid down in
detailed agreements. Observing compliance with those agreements is also a
task of the Commission which may ultimately rely on the European Court to
rule on the Council’s policies if necessary.
Empirical evidence for the politico-economic mechanism
The Maastricht effect on fiscal policies since 1992
Contrary to more sceptical views on the Maastricht criteria and the SGP, the
process toward EMU has been a success so far, at least as far as the goal of fiscal
restraint is concerned. The overall improvement of fiscal discipline in the
European Union since the beginning of the 1990s is obvious. The year 1993
has been the high watermark in overall fiscal deficits for seven EU countries as
well as for the total Union and the group of EMU member states. Since 1996,
all EU countries except for Italy and Austria have been decreasing their
deficits, and since 1998 no country has run deficits exceeding the 3 per cent
benchmark of the Maastricht Treaty (Table 2.1). A look at primary deficits
provides an even more impressive look (Table 2.2). While Belgium, Ireland,
Table 2.1 General government budget balances in the EU (net surplus (+) or net deficit (–) in % of GDP)
1980
1985
1989
1990
Belgium
–8.6
Germany
–2.9
Spain
–2.5
France
0.0
Ireland
–11.6
Italy
–8.6
The Netherlands –4.1
Austria
–1.6
Portugal
–8.6
Finland
3.3
EU114
–3.4
Denmark
–3.2
Greece
–2.6
Sweden
–3.9
United Kingdom –3.4
–3.4
EU154
–9.0
–1.2
–6.1
–2.8
–10.2
–12.5
–3.5
–2.4
–10.3
2.9
–4.8
–2.0
–11.6
–3.7
–2.9
–4.5
–6.1
0.1
–3.5
–1.2
–1.7
–9.8
–4.6
–2.7
–2.3
6.2
–3.1
0.3
–14.2
5.2
1.0
–2.2
–5.4
–2.1
–4.1
–1.5
–2.2
–11.0
–4.9
–2.4
–5.0
5.3
–4.2
–1.0
–15.9
4.1
–0.9
–3.5
1992
1993
1994
19951
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000²
2001²
–6.2
–6.9
–3.2³ –2.8
–4.3
–4.0
–2.0
–3.9
–2.3
–2.4
–10.0
–9.5
–2.8
–3.8
–3.0
–1.9
–5.9
–2.9
–1.5
–5.7
–4.5
–4.7
–2.4
–2.2
–11.4 –12.6
–1.1
–7.5
–2.3
–6.1
–4.1
–5.0
–7.2
–3.5
–6.7
–5.6
–2.3
–9.4
–3.1
–4.2
–6.0
–7.9
–5.5
–2.8
–13.6
–11.9
–7.8
–6.0
–4.8
–2.6
–6.1
–5.7
–1.6
–9.1
–3.6
–4.9
–5.9
–6.1
–5.0
–2.6
–9.9
–9.9
–6.7
–5.4
–4.2
–3.3
–7.0
–5.6
–2.5
–7.6
–4.2
–5.1
–4.2
–3.7
–5.0
–2.3
–10.2
–7.9
–5.8
–5.2
–3.7
–3.4
–5.0
–4.2
–0.6
–7.1
–1.8
–3.8
–3.8
–3.2
–4.3
–1.0
–7.8
–3.4
–4.4
–4.2
–2.0
–2.6
–3.2
–3.0
0.8
–2.7
–1.2
–1.9
–2.6
–1.5
–2.6
0.5
–4.6
–2.0
–2.0
–2.5
–1.0
–1.7
–2.6
–2.7
2.1
–2.8
–0.8
–2.5
–2.1
1.3
–2.1
1.2
–3.1
1.9
0.3
–1.5
–0.9
–1.1
–1.1
–1.8
2.0
–1.9
0.5
–2.0
–2.0
2.3
–1.2
3.0
–1.6
1.9
1.2
–0.6
–0.5
–1.0
–0.7
–1.6
1.7
–1.5
1.0
–1.8
–1.5
4.1
–0.9
2.5
–1.3
2.4
0.9
–0.4
–0.2
–1.4
–0.4
–1.2
2.7
–0.8
0.4
–2.0
–1.5
5.1
–0.8
2.5
–0.6
2.9
0.7
–0.3
1991
Source: European Commission (2000b).
Notes
1 From 1995: ESA 95 definitions (on average resulting in 0.2% higher deficits than calculations with former definitions).
2 Estimation.
2 From 1991: including the former GDR.
4 Excluding Luxembourg.
Table 2.2 General government budget balances in the EU, excluding interest (net primary surplus (+) or net primary deficit (–) in % of GDP)
1980
Belgium
–2.7
Germany
–1.0
Spain
–1.8
France
1.4
Ireland
–5.6
Italy
–3.2
The Netherlands –0.4
Austria
0.8
Portugal
–5.9
Finland
4.3
–0.8
EU114
Denmark
0.7
Greece
–0.6
Sweden
0.1
United Kingdom 1.3
EU154
–0.4
1985
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
19951
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000²
2001²
1.4
1.9
–4.2
0.0
–0.9
–4.5
2.6
1.0
–2.7
4.7
–0.4
7.7
–6.7
4.4
2.1
0.3
4.0
2.8
0.4
1.5
5.7
–1.1
1.2
1.2
3.8
7.6
1.5
7.5
–6.8
10.4
4.7
2.4
5.0
0.6
–0.3
1.4
5.3
–1.6
0.8
1.6
2.9
6.7
0.7
6.3
–5.9
8.9
2.2
1.2
3.8
–0.6³
–0.6
0.9
5.0
0.1
3.1
1.2
1.8
0.4
0.4
4.9
–2.1
3.9
0.4
0.6
3.7
0.4
0.3
–0.7
4.3
1.9
2.3
2.2
4.2
–3.1
0.8
4.4
–1.1
–2.3
–3.4
0.1
3.5
–0.2
–1.7
–2.3
4.0
2.6
2.9
0.1
0.1
–3.3
0.0
4.5
–1.0
–5.9
–5.0
–0.8
5.2
0.7
–1.4
–2.2
4.1
1.8
2.0
–0.9
0.2
–1.1
0.3
4.1
4.0
–3.4
–3.6
–0.2
4.9
0.4
–1.7
–1.8
3.1
3.9
1.7
–0.7
2.1
0.3
0.6
4.2
1.0
–0.8
–2.1
0.3
5.0
0.3
0.4
–0.2
4.1
4.4
3.8
0.4
1.6
1.1
1.4
5.1
2.8
3.7
–0.7
1.3
5.9
1.0
1.6
0.7
5.1
6.7
3.9
2.0
1.7
2.8
2.5
6.2
3.7
4.8
1.7
2.5
6.6
1.9
1.8
0.9
5.6
5.3
4.1
1.3
1.5
5.0
2.7
6.5
4.7
8.0
4.0
3.1
6.3
2.5
2.5
1.6
4.6
4.9
5.0
1.6
1.4
5.8
3.1
7.7
5.8
7.4
4.1
3.5
6.4
2.5
2.8
1.6
3.9
4.9
5.1
1.8
1.8
7.5
3.1
6.8
5.8
7.1
3.9
3.5
6.4
2.0
2.9
2.0
4.7
5.3
4.1
1.5
1.8
8.1
3.1
6.4
5.9
7.0
3.5
3.4
Source: European Commission (2000b).
Notes
1 From 1995: ESA 95 definitions.
2 Estimation.
3 From 1991: including the former GDR.
4 Excluding Luxembourg.
60 Ralph Rotte
Italy and Portugal have been running primary surpluses already since the late
1980s and early 1990s, all other EU countries have achieved positive primary
budget balances between 1994 and 1997. Since 1997 there have only been
primary surpluses in the Union.
Actual fiscal policy is of course not independent of the business cycle. In
general, in times of recession and depression the political pressure to increase
deficit spending will be higher than during periods of economic expansion.
Therefore, Table 2.3 gives an overview of cyclically adjusted budget balances
in the European Union. While the general shift to decreasing budget deficits
is more unevenly distributed among the states now, it still holds that since
1998 there have been no more deficits exceeding the Maastricht criterion. Apart
from slight increases in deficit spending in several countries in 2000 and 2001,
the overall performance of fiscal policy has become remarkably positive if compared to the pre-1991–92 figures. This has a positive impact on the debt
situation in the Union. Between 1993–94 and 1996–97 gross debt ratios started
to decrease persistently in all EU states except for France and Germany which
reached their peaks of debt only in 1998 and 1999, respectively (Table 2.4).
In brief, the decision for EMU, SGP and their institutionalization, has
really had a disciplining effect on fiscal policy in Europe so far. Rotte (1998)
and Rotte and Zimmermann (1998) have provided some empirical evidence
for the underlying politico-economic mechanism based on the Europeanization argument. It is shown that being a Maastricht Treaty member state has
had a significantly negative effect on deficits. This effect is not the consequence of a general shift in economic ideology in the OECD countries since
1991. Apart from a structural break in the determinants of fiscal deficits in
1991–92, there is indeed a significant effect of the support for the European
Union, especially if one focuses on Union member countries which have
neither reserved an opt-out choice for EMU (i.e. excluding Denmark and the
United Kingdom) nor have been EU members for a while already (i.e.
excluding Austria, Sweden and Finland). In these countries the effect of high
unemployment and low growth as typical driving forces of deficit spending on
the budget balance have decreased since 1992 or have become insignificant
altogether, even if one controls for growth and inflation effects. Empirical
results show that, in general, the more popular the European Union is in a
country, the less responsive to political pressure the government is with the
budget, which perfectly fits the theoretical core of the political economy
hypothesis of EMU and SGP.
Government performance under collective surveillance
The first stability and consolidation programmes were presented in late 1998
and 1999. Due to problems in establishing a working government after the last
elections, only Austria was late in providing the 2000 programmes. The benchmarks against which the programmes are evaluated are the general directions
of economic policy, which are concluded annually by the Council, following
Table 2.3 Cyclically adjusted general government budget balances in the EU (net surplus (+) or net deficit (–) in % of GDP)
1980
1985
Belgium
–10.5 –7.5
Germany
–4.0 –0.2
Spain
–2.3 –4.9
France
–0.4 –1.8
Ireland
–12.6 –10.2
Italy
–9.6 –12.0
The Netherlands –5.2 –2.7
Austria
–2.1 –1.9
Portugal
–9.4 –8.6
Finland
3.1
2.7
–4.2 –4.0
EU114
Denmark
–5.3 –6.6
Greece
–3.6 –11.4
Sweden
–3.9 –3.7
United Kingdom –3.0 –2.3
–4.0 –3.8
EU154
1989
–7.3
0.4
–4.9
–2.3
–1.8
–10.7
–5.3
–2.8
–3.3
0.8
–3.8
–2.2
–14.8
2.3
–0.9
–3.2
Source: European Commission (2000b).
Notes
1 From 1995: ESA 95 definitions.
2 Estimation.
3 From 1991: including the former GDR.
4 Excluding Luxembourg.
1990
–7.0
–3.3
–5.8
–2.9
–3.4
–11.9
–6.7
–2.9
–6.3
0.6
–5.5
–2.7
–16.1
1.1
–2.1
–4.9
1991
1992
–7.7
–8.2
–5.2³ –4.6
–5.8
–4.8
–3.0
–4.7
–2.3
–1.7
–10.7
–9.8
–4.3
–4.7
–3.8
–2.5
–7.0
–3.9
–1.2
–2.1
–5.8
–5.7
–3.3
–1.9
–12.1 –13.1
–2.1
–6.4
–1.9
–4.8
–5.2
–5.6
1993
–6.1
–3.8
–6.1
–5.2
–0.5
–8.6
–2.4
–4.2
–5.7
–2.4
–5.1
–0.5
–12.9
–7.9
–6.6
–5.4
1994
19951
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000²
2001²
–4.3
–3.0
–5.4
–5.3
0.5
–8.5
–3.2
–5.0
–5.4
–1.9
–4.8
–2.9
–9.2
–8.0
–6.4
–5.1
–3.8
–3.5
–6.2
–5.1
–1.5
–7.6
–3.2
–5.0
–3.7
–0.6
–4.6
–2.8
–9.5
–7.4
–5.6
–4.9
–2.5
–3.0
–4.1
–3.3
0.1
–6.8
–0.9
–3.7
–3.4
–0.8
–3.7
–1.5
–7.0
–2.1
–4.2
–3.7
–1.6
–2.0
–2.6
–2.1
0.3
–2.5
–0.7
–1.5
–2.3
–1.2
–2.0
–0.6
–4.1
–0.6
–2.3
–2.0
–0.7
–1.2
–2.3
–2.1
1.2
–2.5
–0.6
–2.2
–2.0
0.6
–1.7
0.1
–3.0
2.9
0.2
–1.2
–0.3
–0.3
–1.1
–1.3
0.8
–1.4
0.7
–1.7
–1.8
1.9
–0.7
2.7
–1.6
2.0
1.4
–0.2
–0.5
–0.7
–0.8
–1.6
0.5
–1.3
0.6
–1.7
–1.5
3.3
–0.9
2.5
–1.7
1.7
0.7
–0.4
–0.6
–1.5
–0.6
–1.4
2.0
–0.9
–0.2
–2.0
–1.6
4.2
–1.0
2.8
–1.3
1.9
0.3
–0.6
Table 2.4 General government consolidated gross debt in the EU (% of GDP)
1980
1985
Belgium
76.6 119.3
Germany
31.8 41.7
Spain
16.8 41.9
France
19.3 30.3
Ireland
67.7 98.6
Italy
57.9 81.9
The Netherlands 45.1 68.7
Austria
35.8 48.8
Portugal
31.9 60.8
Finland
11.5 16.2
34.7 51.9
EU114
Denmark
37.6 70.4
Greece
23.6 50.9
Sweden
39.6 61.6
United Kingdom 54.7 54.1
EU154
37.9 53.0
1989
124.4
41.8
41.4
33.9
98.7
95.4
76.0
57.6
62.2
14.7
56.7
57.9
68.4
43.9
37.7
53.5
Source: European Commission (2000b).
Notes
1 From 1996: ESA 95 definitions.
2 Estimation.
3 From 1991: including the former GDR.
4 Excluding Luxembourg.
1990
124.7
43.8
43.2
34.9
92.6
97.3
75.6
56.8
64.2
14.3
58.1
57.7
89.0
42.1
35.0
54.5
1991
1992
126.5 127.9
40.3³ 43.0
43.9
46.3
35.2
39.0
92.4
90.0
100.6 107.7
75.7
76.4
57.0
56.9
66.1
58.8
22.7
40.7
57.9
61.2
62.3
66.4
91.2
97.5
51.2
64.8
35.1
41.1
54.9
59.1
1993
134.6
47.0
57.9
44.3
94.0
118.1
77.6
61.4
62.0
56.8
66.1
78.0
110.2
75.1
47.8
64.7
1994
132.7
49.3
60.4
47.6
88.1
123.8
74.0
64.2
62.7
58.3
68.4
73.5
107.9
77.7
49.8
66.8
19951
129.8
57.0
63.2
51.9
80.8
123.2
75.5
68.0
64.7
56.6
71.6
69.3
108.7
76.6
52.0
69.8
1996
128.3
59.8
68.1
57.1
74.1
122.2
75.3
68.3
63.6
57.1
74.9
65.1
111.3
76.0
52.7
72.2
1997
123.0
60.9
66.7
59.0
65.3
119.8
70.3
63.9
60.3
54.1
74.7
61.4
108.5
75.0
50.9
71.1
1998
117.4
60.7
64.9
59.3
55.6
116.3
67.0
63.5
56.5
49.0
73.1
55.8
105.4
72.4
48.4
69.1
1999
114.4
61.0
63.5
58.6
52.4
114.9
63.7
64.6
56.7
47.1
72.3
52.5
104.4
65.5
45.9
67.7
2000²
110.0
60.7
62.3
58.2
45.2
110.8
58.7
64.0
57.0
42.7
70.5
49.3
103.8
61.3
42.4
65.1
2001²
105.2
59.5
59.9
57.1
38.1
106.6
54.5
63.6
55.1
38.0
68.2
46.3
99.7
55.4
39.4
62.5
Political economy of EMU and EU Stability Pact 63
recommendations by the Commission and comments by the European
Council. According to art. 99 TEC, the basic directions are to provide the
foundation of co-ordinated national economic and fiscal policies.
Concerning the actual implementation of those programmes, one has to note
that they are clearly more than a scrap of paper presented due to formal obligations. In its report for 1999, for example, the European Commission (2000a)
has emphasized that the budgetary targets given have been reached or even outdone. In 1999 the Nordic countries (Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands
and the United Kingdom) had budget surpluses. Germany, Belgium, Spain
and Greece had a deficit of 1.0 to 1.5 per cent of GDP, while deficits in France,
Italy, Austria and Portugal were about 2.0 per cent. Only Austria and Portugal
narrowly missed their projected budget balances of –2.0 per cent of GDP.
The disciplining effect of the co-ordination and control mechanism of SGP
on national policies has also already been demonstrated (Osterkamp, 2000;
Rotte, 2000). Following some criticism by the Commission in spring 1999,
the Austrian government hurried to promise further efforts of fiscal consolidation. At the same time Italy corrected its deficit projection for 1999 from
2.0 to 2.4 per cent of GDP. While this was granted by the Council, the Italian
government tried nevertheless to stick to the original target and finally
managed to achieve it. These two examples show that SGP does work
according to its intentions. The exeptional amendment of the Italian stability
programme in spring 1999 contradicts in fact its interpretation as the original
sin of SGP that could be found, for example, in conservative comments in
Germany. The formally granted excession of the original deficit target was
obviously not used as an authorization for a less rigid fiscal policy but was only
a reserve position that became obsolete by the better than expected economic
performance. The Italian example therefore demonstrates some flexibility of
SGP which helps to avoid too much dogmatism in economic policy. Moreover, the deficits of 2.0 or 2.4 per cent were still far below the 3 per cent mark
defining an excessive deficit in the Treaties. Since the establishment of SGP no
EU country, including EMU laggard Greece, has had a deficit that might have
come close to the 3 per cent benchmark for the excessive deficit procedures.
Conclusion
Persistent deficit spending is a basic problem of the policial economy of
democracies. By establishing rules and control mechanisms for fiscal deficits
in its member countries, the European Union has provided a new, collective
approach to tackle this problem. The Maastricht criteria for EMU of 1991 as
well as the self-commitment to permanent fiscal restraint as specified in the
Stability and Growth Pact of 1996–97, combine the principles of delegation of
national political responsibility for austerity measures to international organizations with positive public attitudes toward European political integration.
These two elements enable governments to implement fiscal reform in order to
keep their countries on the track of integration. Furthermore, codification of
64 Ralph Rotte
the rules in unanimous international agreements as well as the important role
of supranational institutions like the EU Commission and the European
Central Bank in assessing national fiscal policies support the maintenance of
fiscal discipline, especially in the case of EMU member states. Empirical
evidence suggests that the Maastricht and SGP regimes have been a success so
far and that the underlying politico-economic mechanism of Europeanization
of economic authority actually works in the way described above.
Nevertheless, the real test of SGP has still to be passed. So far, fiscal restraint
in Europe since the mid-1990s has been eased by an improving economic
environment and growth while fundamental problems, like the reorganization of public health care and pension systems have hardly been tackled so far.
Only necessary reforms of the welfare state and economic recession will
ultimately show if the governments‘ self-commitment to fiscal discipline,
even if it is backed up by collective European, quasi-federal structures and
controls, is strong enough to endure the real hardships of domestic policy to be
expected in the coming years.
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Part II
Development of EU
budgetary measures
3
The development of EU
budgetary measures and the
rise of structural funding
Jeffrey Harrop
Introduction
This chapter examines the ways in which the EU Budget has been financed
and the role it has played in terms of allocating and redistributing resources.
Particular emphasis is given to the growth of the Structural Funds to provide
modest redistribution. This has partly changed the role of the Budget from its
original conception and is shedding fresh light on the new kind of European
Union which is emerging. It will be argued that the original size of the EU
Budget was too small and even today remains insufficient to achieve economic
convergence. Further, the proposed resources made available for an enlarged
EU appear insufficient and it seems likely that the Budget may need to grow
to ensure that the Union will have sufficient resources to finance future
expenditures, especially for eastern enlargement.
It is necessary to examine the operation of the EU Budget both in terms of
its revenue and its expenditure, before considering the reforms introduced by
the Delors I and II packages. On the expenditure side the most significant
feature has been the growth of the Structural Funds and this is covered in
detail. Finally, the issue of budgetary transfers between member states is
analysed, particularly in terms of the way this has affected the United Kingdom.
Key features of the Budget
The Community’s Budget derives from the positive law in the financial
provisions of the treaties plus a significant amount of soft law which has been
significantly consolidated recently from the interinstitutional agreements. In
the early years of what was then the Community there were several budgets
because of the autonomy of the institutions established under the ECSC, the
EEC and the European Atomic Energy Community. However, there has now
been a unification of these budgets resulting in a single document with the
General Budget and the ECSC operating Budget. The European Development
Fund (EDF) has been separate, with a token entry in the Budget, but the wish of
the European Parliament is to integrate its activities into the General Budget.
Budget operations are annual, but to provide for multi-annual operations
70 Jeffrey Harrop
there are commitment appropriations and payment appropriations. Each
appropriation is specified for given purposes. Budget items are generally
entered normally, but token entries occur when special conditions apply, and
whenever a dash ( – ) is found in a Budget heading, this has ceased to be
operational but remains in the Budget to complete the implementation of
payment appropriations for previous years.
The EU Budget differs from national budgets in various ways. Although it
appears large in absolute terms, when expressed as a percentage of GDP it
stands at only 1.27 per cent of GDP. The expenditure of the EU15 is similar to
the total national expenditure by a small European country such as Denmark.
This under-development of the Federal Budget, compared with member
states’ budgets, is a consequence of the absence of big expenditure on defence,
social security and education which are mainly conducted by the member
states. The EU Budget is also an accounting budget which is expected to
balance and not to engage in national functional macroeconomic Keynesian
stabilization policies. The EU Budget excludes lending and borrowing
activities, though these have been extensive for coal and steel, nuclear energy,
the New Community Instrument for investment by Small and Medium-sized
Enterprises (SMEs), balance of payments assistance, and finally, the massive
role of the European Investment Bank. Also note that the European Investment Fund was established in 1994 and 40 per cent of the capital is subscribed
by the EIB (with the rest by the European Union and banks). It guarantees
loans for infrastructure and more risky SMEs and it is also intended to develop
further by taking an equity interest.
Revenue
The creation of the ECSC under the Treaty of Paris in 1951 provided for an
administrative budget and an operating budget, and the establishment of the
EEC in 1957 provided a single budgetary mechanism.
The separate budgetary arrangements of the ECSC, Euratom and the EEC
were brought together into a General Budget after their merger in 1968. Both
Euratom and the EEC were initially dependent for their receipts on national
contributions and a key was constructed to determine these, based on national
income and the degree of involvement in different activities. This was a
reasonably fair system, but the Community decided that it needed its own
direct sources of revenue. The Luxembourg Agreements concluded in 1970
replaced the financial contributions from member states by a system of own
resources and also began the process of increasing the role of the European
Parliament. For example, by the mid-1970s the EP obtained the final word on
non-compulsory expenditure as long as it did not exceed the maximum rate of
increase. In addition, it was the President of Parliament and not the President
of the Council who was able to declare the Budget finally adopted.
In relation to the Community’s own resources it began to use both customs
duties derived from the Common External Tariff and agricultural levies on
Development of EU budgetary measures and rise of structural funding 71
imports from outside the EU. These agricultural levies have mainly been
replaced by agricultural duties since the GATT agreements from mid-1995.
Sugar and isoglucose levies are also applied on production and storage, plus an
additional levy to offset the overall loss since the 1988–89 marketing year
which is not covered by the yield of the production levies. The Community’s
duties are collected at important entry points: ports such as Rotterdam and
Antwerp. Since the goods’ final destination is often elsewhere, such as
Germany, it was decided that logically the revenue raised should accrue not to
national governments but to the Community. The European Union was
influenced in its desire to have its own direct source of revenue by the ECSC,
which imposed levies on coal and steel production, and these are now
incorporated in the full EU budgetary receipts. The lack of dynamism in
revenue receipts, because of tariff cuts in GATT and increasing agricultural
self-sufficiency, led to a growing dependence upon VAT resources. These are
derived from the application of a uniform rate to each member state’s VAT
base, applied in a uniform manner to accord with Community rules. This
over-reliance upon VAT was generally a mistake because VAT tends to be a
regressive tax, since in poorer countries consumption accounts for a larger
share of disposable income than in richer countries. Furthermore, since
investment and exports, which are both higher in richer countries, were not
subject to VAT, this resulted in the poor contributing proportionally more
than the rich. Nevertheless, it became necessary to raise the VAT ceiling from
1 per cent to a maximum of 1.4 per cent from January 1986, with pressure to
raise this further.
It became necessary to search for additional sources of revenue and the
introduction of a fourth resource as part of the Delors I package was introduced in 1988. The common rate of VAT at 1.4 per cent was left unchanged
and the assessment base for VAT was not to exceed 55 per cent of GNP at
market prices, thus ensuring that high consumption and low income member
states would not contribute too much. The fourth resource was calculated by
applying a rate on the difference between each member state’s GNP and its
harmonized VAT base. The general trend between the four main sources of
Community revenue from 1971 to 2000 was a continuous annual fall of
customs duties from 1978 and the rise of VAT receipts from 1979 until the
introduction of the fourth resource in 1988. Revenue was limited to a ceiling
of 1.2 per cent of EU GNP in 1992.
The Delors II package reduced the VAT rate from 1.4 to 1 per cent, accompanied by a reduction of the assessment base for VAT from 55 to 50 per cent of
GNP for member states with a per-capita GNP of less than 90 per cent of the
Community average. By 1999 VAT receipts had dropped below those linked
to GNP and the Budget on the revenue side is now much more equitable.
Revenue was limited to a ceiling of 1.27 per cent of EU GNP by 1999.
It was agreed at the Berlin Summit in March 1999 that there would be a
progressive reduction in the dependence on the VAT base from a notional 1
per cent to 0.75 per cent in 2002 and 0.5 per cent in 2004. Traditional own
72 Jeffrey Harrop
resources are paid to the Commission within two months of establishment of
the entitlement and 10 per cent has been deducted to cover member states’
collection costs and this deduction for collection costs increased from 10 to 25
per cent from the beginning of 2001. Whilst revenue sources currently appear
ample, should revenue prove unexpectedly insufficient for an enlarging
Union, then perhaps other alternative sources may have to be considered and
ones which could be introduced might extend to environmental taxes or
corporate taxes.
Expenditure
A small amount of expenditure goes on financing staff (32,077 in 1999) and
administration of the institutions: Parliament, Council, Commission, Court
of Justice, Court of Auditors, Economic and Social Committee and Committee of the Regions.
The bulk of expenditure has been allocated to EU operations of which the
dominant section has been agriculture. This has underpinned the ambitious
objectives of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) which have proved
costly as reflected by EAGGF expenditure. The composition of Community
expenditure was changed from its early domination by ECSC expenditure and
administrative costs to EAGGF expenditure after 1965. Its share of the
Budget, for example, was about 75 per cent in 1973 and around 70 per cent in
1978, falling to 45 per cent by 2000. While the percentage of budgetary
expenditure devoted to agriculture has fallen, in absolute terms it has
continued to increase. Note that there is also a separate monetary reserve in
addition to provide appropriations for agriculture to cover any shortfall caused
by decline in the US dollar against the euro. Agriculture’s share of budgetary
expenditure has continued to remain too high in relation to agriculture’s
diminishing share of EU employment and the growing need for more
desirable expenditure in other areas. Open-ended and automatic agricultural
expenditure created problems, necessitating reform. One significant change
was the Brussels Council Agreement in 1988 which laid down that the annual
growth of EAGGF Guarantee expenditure should not exceed 74 per cent of the
annual growth of the Community GNP.
Other necessary expenditure has been increased to improve the competitiveness of EU industry with more spending on R&D and on Trans-European
Networks (TENS). Between 1993–99 there was a 30 per cent increase in
internal policies, focusing on research, with the highest growth rate in
expenditure being for TENS. The latter also has implications for regional
development and this will be considered in greater depth in relation to the
Structural Funds. Unfortunately most existing expenditure policies such as
the CAP and high tech policies for industry have tended to reinforce regional
inequalities or at best be neutral. Despite some improvement, even TENs have
benefits for core regions as well as the more peripheral and poor ones. Between
1993 and 1999 preparations for the accession and adjustment of new members
Development of EU budgetary measures and rise of structural funding 73
also led to an increase in external action expenditure by over 40 per cent and
reached 6.2 per cent of the Budget for 2000.
Budgetary redistribution and the role of the
structural funds
The normal macroeconomic exposition of a national budget is that of an
automatic stabilizer. Given low incomes and low employment, low tax
revenue is collected (from income tax, VAT and corporation tax), and there is a
high level of government expenditure on welfare and unemployment benefits.
Thus in a recession there is a budget deficit. Where G = T there is a balanced
budget. With a higher level of economic growth and employment there is a
budget surplus in which T >G. National policies may still just be sufficient to
achieve minimal stabilization in the EU.
National budgets act not only as automatic stabilizers but also redistribute
income by progressive taxation and welfare expenditure. Automatic redistribution takes place to help the poor and to the extent that a majority of poor
people characterize poorer regions then they are the major beneficiaries. For
example, poor regions, such as lagging regions and regions in the process of
restructuring, lie to the left of the budgetary balance so that G >T, whereas
core regions lie to the right of the budgetary balance so that T >G. The main
redistribution occurs through national budgets since they are large and
welfare orientated. In contrast the EU Budget is very small, lacks the federal
arrangements seen in North America and is not concerned with normal social
welfare policies (Bayoumi and Masson 1995).
How much should one prioritize the regional dimension of social need? For
example, it is not well targeted since there are some rich people in poor regions
and some poor people in rich regions. However, by ensuring that the needy
poor in the weakest EU regions are helped, this reaffirms a feeling of community and solidarity. Since this is still weaker at EU than at national level,
EU policy is not based mainly on social transfers since these create a welfare
dependency culture. Instead EU policy is based mainly on direct regional aid
to try to create conditions in which weaker areas are enabled to catch up and
improve their economic potential in order to ‘stand on their own feet’
eventually. In establishing an explicit regional policy the EU differs from the
much more neo-classical and minimalist free trading approach reflected by
the United States and manifest in NAFTA (Sweet, 1999). The EU has moved
beyond reliance mainly on market forces and a benign neglect of active
regional policy in the Treaty of Rome towards accepting the obligations of a
firm and extensive regional policy.
The most significant change in budgetary expenditure has been in terms of
the growth of the Structural Funds (SFs). These comprise the European
Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund, the European Agricultural Guidance Fund and the Financial Instrument for Fisheries Guidance,
while the Cohesion Fund is usually shown as a separate part of structural
74 Jeffrey Harrop
operations. Structural Fund expenditure really began to take off after 1975
when it accounted for 6.2 per cent of total budgetary expenditure and the
newly created ERDF accounted for 2.5 per cent of total expenditure. The
ERDF, which is the only fund devoted solely to regional development, has
become the dominant fund and by 2000 was responsible for 15.7 per cent of
total budgetary expenditure. The ERDF has focused strongly upon ‘hard’
transport infrastructure but has also broadened its expenditure on general
infrastructure, productive investment and SMEs. The ESF is concerned with
‘soft’ labour market infrastructure and deals with labour mobility training
and retraining matters, etc. By 1999, the share of the Budget devoted to the
CAP had fallen to 42.2 per cent whilst 40.5 per cent of the Budget was
allocated to structural operations. The latter developed for a variety of reasons.
It was recognized that the convergence of market forces was insufficient and
that regional disparities were likely to be self-reinforcing rather than selfcorrecting. For example, the Single European Market with its focus increasingly on removing NTBs to high tech industries and services, was more likely
to benefit the core areas in the EU at the expense of the poorer and more
peripheral areas. Enlargement to southern Europe meant that politically they
were able to extract further structural funding as a quid pro quo for the creation
of the SEM. The MacDougall Report of 1977 had recommended a much larger
Budget than currently exists and significant regional transfers.
Given the increasing goal of economic and social cohesion, the Structural
Funds were reformed in 1988 and 1993 to provide greater concentration of
expenditure and the establishment of priority objectives. The first Objective
was to help less developed regions to catch up, i.e. those with per-capita GDP
less than 75 per cent of the Community average. From 1989–93, 63 per cent
of the SFs went on Objective I and this increased to 74 per cent 1994–99. The
second Objective has been to assist conversion in declining industrial regions
and 1989–93 this accounted for 11 per cent of expenditure which fell to 6 per
cent in 1994–99. Objectives 3 and 4 are horizontal in nature, with Objective 3
dealing with unemployment and social exclusion and Objective 4 applying to
changes which are threatening those already in employment. Objective 5a has
been to speed up the adjustment of agricultural structures and has been
tackled by the European Agricultural Guidance Fund and the Financial
Instrument for Fisheries Guidance. Objective 5b is regional, laying down the
general criteria of a low level of economic development involving features such
as low agricultural income, high agricultural unemployment and depopulation.
A new Objective 6 was introduced after the 1995 enlargement of the EU to
include countries with a low population density (with fewer than eight people
per square kilometre). In Agenda 2000 the Commission proposed to reduce
the number of Objectives to three: Objective 1 to focus on all aspects of underdevelopment of lagging regions and account for 69.7 per cent of expenditure,
and Objective 2 to include all regions’ restructuring in the face of industrial
difficulties and receive 11.5 per cent (note that an additional percentage for
trans-national support is also committed to both Objective 1 and Objective 2
Development of EU budgetary measures and rise of structural funding 75
regions). Finally, Objective 3 is a horizontal objective for Human Resources to
modernize education and employment and to account for 12.3 per cent of the
SFs. The EU has encouraged Community Initiatives (CIs) mainly to alleviate
common problems affecting border regions, employment and adaptation to
industrial change. Unfortunately CIs mushroomed and have now been pruned
back. The EU has proposed to concentrate on three fields: cross-border and
trans-national co-operation; rural development; and human resources (with
particular attention to equal opportunities).
The SFs have elevated the role and significance of the regions, helping them
to develop strongly, mainly through neo-classical supply-side benefits,
encouraging them to improve economic performance. Problems have been in
getting matching funding which has been difficult for the poorer member
states, and also in trying to make sure that expenditure really is ‘additional’.
When SFs are fully matched by national funding and truly additional, this
doubles the total expenditure. There is both a problem of weaker regions
which exist in rich member states, now including Germany since unification,
but more significantly a problem of poor regions in poor member states,
particularly in southern Europe.
To the extent that there is a need for national redistribution, this has been
provided by the Cohesion Fund which was established to cater for member
states with less than 90 per cent of EU per-capita GDP. It has been directed at
Spain, Portugal, Greece and Ireland. Spending has been concentrated on
transport and environmental projects. The Cohesion Fund accounted for 1.2
per cent of Community expenditure in 1993 and 3.3 per cent in 1999. Unlike
Structural Funding, which is supposed to be additional, Cohesion Funding
has been conditional, based on the need to reduce budgetary spending as a
percentage of GDP to enable countries to fulfil the Maastricht convergence
criteria to join the euro. It is assumed that lower interest rates will bring about
increased private sector investment. Although the Cohesion Fund has had no
explicit remit to create jobs, employment creation has been significant via the
initial effects of construction (and demand-side effects) plus long term supplyside benefits from these projects. The Cohesion Fund mainly finances projects
and unfortunately some of these have been too small. Some applicants have
been motivated by the higher 80–85 per cent level of support than exists in
the SFs (Sweet, 1999: 148). Financing of projects at the same stage is not
possible from both the SFs and the Cohesion Fund. It has been necessary with
proposed eastern enlargement to cap total expenditure so that no country is to
receive in transfer more than 4 per cent of its national GDP from the
Structural Funds and the Cohesion Fund combined. It was decided that a
review of the 90 per cent income criteria would take place in 2003 and that the
80–85 per cent rate of Cohesion Funding would continue.
The redistributive effects of the Structural Funds can be measured either by
levels of expenditure (as indicated previously) or by outcomes in terms of
economic convergence. Data is available on convergence, with the main
measures used being GDP per head and unemployment. Other indicators can
76 Jeffrey Harrop
be added, such as activity rates, migration and also supporting figures on
social, health and environmental matters. The usual caveat is that in
attributing all of the effects to the Structural Funds per se, this neglects other
changes also taking place and affecting regional performance. Note that there
are also statistical limitations in the use of data, for example, GDP statistics at
regional level include FDI and may be much in excess of GNP, as in countries
such as Ireland. Similarly with unemployment statistics, some people are not
counted but have drifted instead into long-term sickness and disability
benefits in some economies, especially the United Kingdom. Furthermore,
low GDP and high unemployment are not always directly correlated in all
cases. Finally, the regional levels (NUTs 1,2,3) are roughly constructed often
artificially and sometimes are not comparing ‘like with like’.
Notwithstanding these limitations, economic convergence has been slowly
taking place and quite strongly for most Objective 1 regions, especially in the
Cohesion countries. The main exception has been Greece, which has struggled
to provide matching funding and also manifests low productivity and a low
participation rate in employment. The bottom ten EU regions (whilst
changing their composition very slightly) have managed to raise their GDP
over a decade to the mid-1990s to half the EU average. Unfortunately the
recession worsened unemployment across EU regions, rising to nearly 30 per
cent in the ten worst regions by 1997.
Budgetary transfers
The EU is responsible for the operation of common policies which have been
agreed to collectively benefit its members. The main economic benefits are nonbudgetary, arising from free trade which provides microeconomic efficiency
gains and macroeconomic gains from lower prices and higher employment.
There are similarly collective benefits from common expenditure policies
financed from the Budget. There are beneficial externalities from many policies
such as financing SFs, industrial R&D, TENs infrastructure expenditure and
environmental policies, etc. Unfortunately, the main allocation of expenditure, such as the CAP, has proved more controversial because of its distorting
trade and budgetary effects.
Within the EU’s aggregate gains, some member states’ regions and interest
groups have done better than others. For example, in trade Germany has
tended to run an industrial trade surplus with the rest of the EU while the
United Kingdom has tended to experience a trade deficit in industrial
products. It is accepted that this is a consequence of market forces and degree
of competitiveness. Like the trade account, the budgetary account was initially
accepted as the natural consequence of the allocation process. However, it has
assumed more significance over time because of its distributive implications.
Since the Community’s inception, Germany, which has gained on the trade
account, has been content to be the largest net contributor to the EU Budget.
It accepted that this was the price to be paid for its reintegration politically
Development of EU budgetary measures and rise of structural funding 77
into a united Europe. After its reunification with East Germany its continued
willingness to finance EU policies has lessened slightly because of the
additional expenditure demands to develop Eastern Germany which have
dragged down its relative per-capita income position in the EU. Whilst it has
been prepared to continue as a good European, sacrificing the D-mark for the
euro, it has sought to trim some of the budgetary costs. For example, leading
up to the Berlin Summit in 1999, Gerhard Schröder started to imitate the
British stance and was successful in reducing Germany’s own contribution to
the British budgetary rebate. Fortunately Germany, after the minor concessions made to it at the Berlin Summit, has been willing to continue to
underwrite much of the added budgetary expenditure necessary for eastern
enlargement since it recognises the political benefits which will accrue to it
and the immense exporting strength which it has in eastern Europe.
The United Kingdom, with both a trade deficit and a budgetary deficit
with the EU, has concentrated its energy on securing a reduction in its
excessive net budgetary transfer. The main source of its budgetary imbalance
has arisen from the centrality of agriculture in EU budgetary expenditure and
to a lesser extent the reliance on agricultural duties to finance this. The United
Kingdom as an open economy and liberal importer of world foodstuffs and
other goods contributed disproportionately to the Budget. For example,
during 1984–89 the United Kingdom was the second largest source of
agricultural levies (behind Italy) and the second largest source of customs
duties (behind Germany).
When the United Kingdom joined the Community it accepted budgetary
contributions beginning at 8.78 per cent in 1973 and increasing to 19.24 per
cent in 1977. The Labour government, concerned about its undue burden,
pressed forward with renegotiation and agreement was reached at the Dublin
Summit in 1975 for a payback system for countries which oversubscribed to
the Budget. It applied to gross contributions and a complex system was created
for a sliding scale reimbursement. Despite a favourable referendum vote in
1975 to remain in the Community, budgetary difficulties soon resurfaced and
were at their most intense during Conservative governments after 1979. The
government pressed for a reduction in its contributions and more nonagricultural expenditure which would benefit the United Kingdom. Between
1980 and 1982 the United Kingdom received a refund of about 70 per cent of
its net budgetary contribution. Finally, at the Fontainebleau Summit in 1984,
the United Kingdom obtained a special guaranteed rebate every year. It
agreed a compensation mechanism for 66 per cent of the difference between its
share of VAT payments and its receipts from the Budget. This was a major
achievement by Mrs Thatcher though inevitably her attitude was seen as noncommunautaire. It encouraged a conflictual focus on budgetary transfers whereas
the architects of European integration had sought to raise their sights above
national conflicts. Transfer estimates are available, but need careful examination. For example, in 1985 all member states received positive transfers financed
by Germany whose share after the British rebate was ECU –3,500 million.
78 Jeffrey Harrop
The UK transfer after the rebate was reduced from ECU –3,000 million to
ECU –1,000 million (The Economist, 20 June 1987).
The main source of transfers can be found in the Court of Auditors’ Annual
Reports; for example, in 1989 the United Kingdom accounted for 14.8 per
cent of EU own resource contributions and received 9.4 per cent of total EU
payments. Germany contributed 25.1 per cent of EU own resources and
received 13.4 per cent of EU payments. By 1997 Germany contributed 28.2
per cent of EU own resources and received 13.1 per cent of EU payments.
Other net contributors, apart from Germany and the United Kingdom,
include the Netherlands which in 1997 paid in 6.4 per cent and received back
3.3 per cent of EU payments. Austria paid in 2.8 per cent and received back
1.7 per cent, and Sweden paid in 3.1 per cent and received back 1.4 per cent.
France paid in 17.5 per cent and received 16 per cent. France has held on to its
agricultural benefits, thus minimizing its net contribution. Italy was in
balance with 11 per cent paid in contributions and 11 per cent in receipts in
1997. Italy has not benefited to the same degree as France from the CAP, but
has continued to be conciliatory over its budgetary situation, accepting
additional contributions at the Berlin Summit in 1999.
Though lessened over time by fairer financing and the growth of expenditure on the SFs, budgetary anomalies still remain; for example, there are still
perverse net budgetary transfers to rich member states such as Denmark,
Belgium and Luxembourg. The situation for Belgium and Luxembourg is
exaggerated partly by their role in hosting the main Community institutions
and all the income does not accrue solely to their own residents. Fortunately
the southern enlargement resulted in the Budget transferring benefits to
poorer member states, along with Ireland. These are referred to as the four
Cohesion countries. The United Kingdom meanwhile has reduced its net
contribution to manageable proportions by stubbornly defending its budgetary rebate. It did this successfully at the Berlin Summit in 1999, and in
response to German pressure the costs of financing the rebate reduced the
contributions of Germany and also Austria, the Netherlands and Sweden to 25
per cent of this, with the balance paid by the other ten member states. The
United Kingdom also made some minor concessions; for example, in accepting that it would not receive any rebate for the pre-accession aid to eastern
Europe to which the United Kingdom would have been entitled. However,
the United Kingdom, by retaining its rebate, has ensured that it will be
refunded two-thirds of its assessed contribution to enlargement.
Budgetary reforms
This section highlights the key dates historically when important budgetary
reforms have taken place. The Luxembourg Agreements in April 1970 provided
budgetary autonomy in the form of own resources. In addition, the role of the
European Parliament was increased and in July 1975 the power of the EP to
reject the Budget was consolidated in the treaty; also, the EP was given the
Development of EU budgetary measures and rise of structural funding 79
final say on non-compulsory expenditure provided that this did not exceed the
maximum rate of increase. Note that the political dialogue of budgetary
procedure between the Commission, Council and EP is not examined here
(details can be found in Commission 1999, pp. 8–9). The focus is mainly on
the economic aspects and when the role of the institutions impinges on these,
then they are worthy of more consideration, such as the creation of the Court of
Auditors in 1975.
During the 1980s the acrimonious United Kingdom budgetary problem
was alleviated at the Fontainebleau Summit in 1984 which agreed the
important principle of a budgetary rebate. After settling existing agreements
between the member states, this paved the way for further southern enlargement to include Iberia in 1986. This, plus the conclusion of the Single European
Act, led to important reforms in the first Delors package. This established a
financial perspective from 1988 to 1992. The aim of the financial perspective
is to indicate political priorities and to set binding expenditure ceilings. This
leaves the annual budgets to determine the actual level of expenditure and to
divide the appropriations between the different budgetary headings. On the
revenue side, a key development was the introduction of a fourth resource
linked to GNP and limiting expenditure to an own resources ceiling which
was 1.15 per cent of GNP in 1988 and 1.20 per cent in 1992. Budgetary
procedure was improved through the Interinstitutional Agreement between
the Commission, Council and European Parliament, helping to avoid major
clashes between the institutions. This reinforced the objective of tighter
budgetary discipline over the various expenditure headings. The rise of agricultural expenditure under heading 1 was limited to make room for increased
expenditure under the other 5 headings (with heading 6 constituting a
monetary reserve). Expenditure was revised according to unexpected changes
internationally, such as German re-unification and the new situation in
eastern Europe, etc. However, the level of budgetary spending was contained
below the own resource ceilings, partly through better procedures, plus rising
GNP and favourable international conditions in agriculture.
A new financial perspective was proposed in 1992 (Delors II) showing
significant continuity from the Delors I package. The six expenditure
headings are similar to those in Delors I, with a few minor changes; for
example, heading 3 is internal policies and includes a significant increase to
finance the TENs. Heading 4 provided a significant increase for ‘external
action’. Heading 2 showed continued growth of the SFs, with the innovation
of the Cohesion Fund. As a consequence, the four member states eligible for
this, plus the Objective 1 funding, were to receive twice as much in 1999 as
under Objective 1 in 1992.
The new financial perspective extended over a longer time period and was
adjusted mid-stream to cater for the fourth enlargement of the EU in 1995.
Some consequences of this enlargement were to increase expenditure under
the various headings (for example, a new Objective 6 under the SFs for sparsely
populated regions), plus a new heading 7 to cover financial compensation of
80 Jeffrey Harrop
Austria, Finland and Sweden, largely in connection with agriculture. For the
EU15 there was also a larger margin left over of 0.03 per cent of GNP for 1998
and 1999. The principle of budgetary discipline continued by getting the EP
to co-operate and respect the annual financial ceilings. The Interinstitutional
Agreement consolidated a tight budgetary approach, continuing to respect
key principles of having no budget appropriations before adoption of a legal
base; keeping margins under the ceilings for each heading to enable additional
appropriations to be entered if necessary without the need for any revision; and
ensuring that insignificant amounts are generally not entered in the Budget.
Enlargement and the new financial perspective
The Commission in its Agenda 2000 Report published in 1997 assessed the
applicants for membership under the three criteria drawn up to cover the
political and economic acceptability along with acceptance of the acquis
communautaire. The economic criteria require the existence of a functioning
market economy, as well as the capacity to cope with competitive pressure and
market forces within the EU. The Commission divided the applicants into
two groups, with the favoured group consisting of the Czech Republic,
Hungary, Poland, Slovenia and Estonia (plus Cyprus). These are regarded as
‘pre-ins’, with the weaker applicants such as Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia,
Latvia and Lithuania (plus Malta) to join later. Unfortunately, many of the
CEECs have never been market economies and therefore an enormous
transition is necessary. Whilst the EU has already provided limited trading
access and modest financial help, at times its overemphasis on macroeconomic
nominal convergence (for example, as part of its Maastricht EMU conditions)
has aggravated the problems in the real economy, such as rising unemployment. Full entry to the EU poses further opportunities and also immense
problems on both sides.
The main components of Agenda 2000 were agreed at the Berlin Summit in
1999. A new Interinstitutional Agreement was finally adopted and sets out
the new financial perspective from 2000 to 2006. On the revenue side there is
less reliance on VAT; also, the financing of the UK budgetary rebate has been
adjusted, reducing the shares paid by some member states who felt that they
were contributing too much. On the expenditure side, under heading 1 the
ceiling on CAP expenditure is set in line with estimated growth in actual
expenditure, taking into account agreed reforms. The agricultural guideline
covers CAP expenditure plus agriculture-related pre-accession aid. There is
also a separate sub-heading for rural development and accompanying measures
and these are classed as non-compulsory expenditure. Apart from the usual
six headings, there is a new heading 7 which provides pre-accession aid and
three instruments which include the agricultural instrument (SAPAR), the
structural instrument (ISPA) and an enhanced PHARE programme for the
applicant countries. While the PHARE expenditure has increased significantly,
the proposed agricultural expenditure looks modest and will inevitably have
Development of EU budgetary measures and rise of structural funding 81
to rise much more after enlargement. Expenditure under heading 7 is to be
used solely for new members, while spending under headings 1 to 6 is completely separate for the EU15. Whilst the needs of the CEECs are enormous,
the financial framework leaves a substantial margin under the own resources
ceiling for unforeseen expenditure; for example, from the own resources ceiling
still fixed at only 1.27 per cent each year, ceiling payments as a percentage of
GNP are 1.13 per cent in 2000 and 2006, giving a margin of 0.14 per cent.
The European Council and Commission may have taken an overly
optimistic view regarding the limited financing needed for the Union’s next
enlargement since these are all countries with low per-capita GNP and
enormous needs for economic development. It is based upon an unchanging
maximum of own resources of 1.27 per cent of EU GNP. Assumptions that
most of the costs of enlargement will come from increased economic growth
depend upon a sustained economic performance. The assumption is that
annual economic growth in the EU15 will average 2.5 per cent, whilst new
member states are expected to grow at 4 per cent around 2006. Cuts in
existing policies such as regional aid will impact undesirably on existing
member states which face cutbacks in structural funding. To make room for
quite generous pre-accession structural operations the Structural Fund expenditure for the EU15 per annum at 1999 prices is set to fall each year. Also, the
percentage allocated to Community Initiatives is set to fall. At the Berlin
Summit it was further agreed that the number of regions receiving aid would
be cut from 51 per cent of the EU15 population to 42 per cent. Transition
payments to regions no longer eligible will be given to cushion the changes.
The four Cohesion countries were given special financial allowance to maintain the combined level of aid they received in 1999. However, they accepted
that when their per-capita GNP reaches 90 per cent of the new EU average,
they will no longer be eligible for Cohesion Funding. For example, Ireland is
set to lose significantly from its structural receipts, including the Cohesion
Fund.
The Commission aims to keep the total cost of structural policies below the
level of 0.46 per cent of EU GDP. There will be a maximum of 4 per cent
of GDP for transfers to the poorest Member States from the Structural
Funds and the Cohesion Fund. Finally, the implementation of continued
agricultural reform proposed by the Commission still needs to be implemented to avoid continued budgetary problems from the less efficient and
more agriculture-dependent CEECs. For example, both Romania and Poland
have had around a quarter of their labour force employed in agriculture and all
the CEECs have a larger percentage of their labour force in agriculture than
the current EU15.
Bibliography
Bayoumi, T. and Masson, P. R. (1995) ‘Fiscal Flows in the United States and Canada:
Lessons for Monetary Union in Europe’, Economic Review, 39.
82 Jeffrey Harrop
Commission of the European Communities (1999) The Community Budget: The Facts in
Figures, SEC (99) 1100 – EN, Luxembourg.
Commission of the European Communities (2000) General Budget of the European Union
for the Financial Year 2000, SEC 150 – EN, Brussels/Luxembourg.
Eijffinger, S. C. W. and de Haan, J. (2000) European Monetary and Fiscal Policy, Oxford
University Press, Oxford.
Hardy, S., Hart, M., Albrechts, L. and Katos, A. (1995) An Enlarged Europe: Regions in
Competition?, Regional Studies Association, Kingsley, London.
Harrop, J. (1996) Structural Funding and Employment in the European Union, Edward
Elgar, Cheltenham.
Harrop, J. (2000) The Political Economy of Integration in the European Union, 3rd edn,
Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.
Laffan, B. (1997) The Finances of the European Union, Macmillan, London.
Martin, R. (1999) The Regional Dimension in European Public Policy: Convergence or
Divergence?, Macmillan, Basingstoke.
Sweet, M. L. (1999) Regional Economic Development in the European Union and North
America, Praeger, Westport.
Wallace, H. (1980) Budgetary Politics: The Finances of the European Communities, Allen
and Unwin, London.
4
The development of the EU
Budget and EMU
1
Brian Ardy
Introduction
Monetary unions historically have only persisted for nation states2 (Bordo and
Jonung, 2000) and they are, therefore, associated with comparatively large
federal/central government budgets. These budgets, besides financing the
provision of government goods and services, also enable fiscal policy to be used
to stabilize the economy and to transfer resources between different regions3
within the country. Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) in the European
Union (EU) is different, as there is no federal government endowed with a
large budget. EU member states have only ceded control over government
expenditure and taxation reluctantly and to a very limited extent. Most EU
policies have developed on the basis of creating a framework of legislation
with little EU expenditure. This is true of the most EU policies such as EMU,
the Single Market, Environmental Policy, Competition Policy etc. European
Union expenditure is further limited by the fact that the operation of policies
remains largely the responsibility of the member states.
Does the lack of significant EU budget pose problems for the operation of
EMU? This chapter, which will seek to answer this question, is arranged in
four sections. First, the macroeconomic stabilization, insurance and redistribution functions of federal budgets are considered. Second, the characteristics
of the EU Budget are examined and the degree to which it can achieve these
functions assessed. Third, the differences between the EU and other federal
budgets will be analysed in relation to the three macroeconomic objectives.
Finally, an overall evaluation will be made of the role of the EU Budget in
relation to EMU.
The macroeconomic fuctions of federal budgets
There are two macroeconomic roles for the budget in a federation: fiscal policy
and transfers between regions. Fiscal policy is the manipulation of the balance
between government expenditure and revenue so as to influence aggregate
demand in the economy. The discretionary use of fiscal policy fell out of favour
with the end of the post-war boom and the increasing ascendancy of monetary
economics. There were concerns over the effectiveness of fiscal expansions in
84 Brian Ardy
the face of crowding out and possible effects of increased national debt on
consumption, as well as practical problems with its implementation. Various
studies (Buti et al., 1997; Alesina and Perotti, 1995; IMF, 1999a) suggested
that budgetary policies have not always been anti-cyclical,4 because of
technical problems, as a result of the constraints of large debt and deficits,5 or
for political reasons.6 There is still, however, seen to be a role for fiscal policy
in the form of automatic stabilizers7 (Buti and Sapir, 1998). Whether federal
fiscal policy is discretionary or automatic, there are three requirements for its
effective operation. First, the federal/central budget should be large in relation
to the economy otherwise changes in the budgetary position will have little
impact on the economy. Second, it must be possible to change the balance
between expenditure and revenue in a counter cyclical manner.8 A balanced
budget is of no use for stabilization purposes. Third, fiscal and monetary
policy should be co-ordinated so that both elements of macroeconomic policy
are pulling in the same direction (Blake and Weale, 1998; Hall et al., 1999).
Regions within a monetary union if affected by asymmetric shocks can no
longer use the exchange rate as a shock absorbing mechanism. One process
that mitigates the impact of asymmetric shocks on regions in nation states is a
system of automatic transfers from the central/federal budget. Central/federal
fiscal policy will act as a means of interregional risk-sharing by transferring
resources between regions. These transfers perform three types of function
(Fatas, 1998): inter-temporal stabilization, interregional insurance and interregional redistribution. The first two stabilize regional income, the third
reduces inequalities in income levels between regions. Inter-temporal stabilization seeks to smooth fluctuations in income levels by compensatory movements in the public sector deficit, the Keynesian stabilization function. Thus,
in a recession government borrowing and debt expand and in the future, when
the economy is growing more quickly, this borrowing can be repaid. Interregional insurance can occur when economic cycles are imperfectly correlated
between regions. Under these circumstances tax revenue from fast growing
regions can be transferred to slow growing regions to finance public expenditure and so smooth the economic cycle. Interregional redistribution involves
the transfer of resources from more prosperous to less prosperous regions. Such
transfers might be justified in terms of the solidarity of the nation state or to
achieve a fairer individual distribution of income.
The delineation of these transfers in theory, and their separation in reality,
are another matter. In national monetary unions, transfers between regions
perform all three functions. For example, national progressive taxation used to
finance social security will automatically achieve some interregional insurance, inter-temporal stabilization and interregional redistribution. The large
size of the central government budget relative to that of the regions and
restrictions on regional budgets9 means that inter-temporal stabilization in
national monetary unions is a central government responsibility. This is also
the case with interregional insurance and redistribution; the difference
between these largely hinges on the length persistence of the shock. Thus, if
The development of EU Budget and EMU 85
two regions had similar per capita income levels but one suffered a temporary
shock reducing income, transfers from the growing to the contracting region
would be interregional insurance. If, by contrast, the shock was permanent then
the difference between the regions would persist and the interregional transfers, if they were not time limited, would become interregional redistribution.
The EU Budget
The EU Budget differs from that of national governments in four fundamental
ways: it is more tightly regulated; it is much smaller; the pattern of expenditure is completely different; and the sources of finance are distinct. These
differences demonstrate the extent to which member states wanted to limit
EU competence in this sensitive area of government activity. Recent controversy in the United Kingdom over an EU-wide tax on saving10 and further EU
tax harmonization have emphasized the political salience of this issue. Thus
budgetary rules contained in the EEC Treaty have been designed to ensure
maximum control by member states and minimum discretion of EU institutions over expenditure and revenue. There are five basic principles derived
from the treaties (European Union, 1997): annuality, balance, unity, universality and specification. Annuality means that the budget is only for the one
year, and that authorization cannot be given beyond this year. This prevents
the build-up of long-term commitments but has caused some problems
because much EU expenditure is now on multi-annual programmes. The practical reconciliation of these two conflicting requirements has been through
the use of commitments for future years, which strictly do not have to be
honoured but which in practice usually are. Balance ensures that revenue
covers expenditure and deficit financing is not permitted.11 Unity requires
that all expenditure be entered in a single budget document. Universality
follows with all EU revenue and expenditure being included in the budget,
such that there are to be no self-cancelling items. Specification requires that
expenditure is allocated to a particular objective and is used for the purposes
the budgetary authority intended. There is however some possibility for
transfers between categories for the effective execution of the Budget.
National government budgets and the EU Budget:
a comparison
Over time the size of the EU Budget has expanded but overall expenditure
continues to be subject to strict limits. The EEC began financing its operations like other international organizations with national contributions as
fixed shares of the overall budget. In 1970 with policies especially the
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) developing and expenditure rising, a
system of ‘Own Resources’ as provided for in the EEC Treaty was set up. ‘Own
Resources’ were the proceeds from the Common Customs Tariff (CCT),
Agricultural and Sugar Levies12 and VAT up to a maximum rate of 1 per cent13
86 Brian Ardy
on the harmonized base. The revenue from these resources represented the
upper limit of EC budgetary expenditure. In 1988 a fourth GNP-based
resource was added and the overall budgetary limit was expressed as a proportion of EU GNP, 1.27 per cent since 1993.14 This maximum level of
expenditure can be changed but to do so requires the unanimous agreement of
the member states. In agreeing to the latest 7-year financial framework for the
EU Budget in 1999 (European Council, 1999) the member states showed that
not only were they not prepared to raise this ceiling but that they wanted
expenditure constrained at a lower level (Begg, 2000).
Revenue from the CCT and agricultural levies so-called traditional own
resources (TOR) has been declining with reductions in protection and falling
agricultural imports. As can be seen from Table 4.1 over 80 per cent of
budgetary revenue now derives from VAT and the GNP resource. The GNP
resource paid by each country is calculated by taking the difference between
overall EU expenditure and the revenue from TOR and VAT, and multiplying
this by the country’s share of EU GNP. So it is simply a way of calculating a
national contribution, which bears no relation to any particular tax. The VAT
contribution has always been somewhat arbitrary because no country actually
used the harmonized base. Gradually, to increase the fairness of the budget, it
has become even more arbitrary so that the VAT base cannot exceed 50 per
cent of GNP. In the 1999 agreement the reduction in the maximum rate of
VAT to 0.5 per cent and the increase in the costs of collecting own resources
means that when the new system is fully operation two thirds of the budget
will be financed by GNP contributions.
Although the EU does have legally independent revenue, this revenue is
derived from national governments’ tax revenue and is tightly controlled by
those governments. What the EU does not have is independent taxes, the rate
of which it has the power to independently vary, and from which it directly
receives revenue. Thus, the typical revenue resources of federal governments
such as income tax, corporation tax, sales taxes, social security contributions
(see Table 4.2) are not available to the EU. Typically in nation states the
federal/central government controls the most significant revenue resources
Table 4.1 EU revenue sources
Agricultural levies
Sugar levies
Customs duties
Costs of collecting own resources
VAT
GNP
Total revenue: ECU/Euro millions
Total revenue: % of EU GDP
1997
1998
1999
1.2%
1.5%
18.1%
–2.1%
45.5%
35.7%
75,292.9
0.94
1.3%
1.3%
16.4%
–1.9%
40.3%
42.6%
82,249.2
1.08
1.4%
1.5%
15.8%
–1.9%
37.9%
45.3%
82,532.7
1.13
Source: European Court of Auditors (1998, 1999, 2000) Annual Report, Luxembourg.
The development of EU Budget and EMU 87
Table 4.2 National central government total revenue, 1997 (% GDP)
Federal states
Australia
United States
Switzerland
Germany
Unitary states
France
Sweden
United Kingdom
EU
Income tax
Corporation Social
tax
security
11.7
8.9
3.1
3.9
4.1
2.2
2.3
0.6
0.0
6.5
12.5
15.5
6.0
2.7
8.9
2.1
3.2
4.2
–
–
Taxes on
goods and
services
Other
Total
4.9
0.7
5.4
6.3
3.1
2.0
0.4
5.3
23.8
20.3
23.7
31.6
17.2
13.6
6.1
11.8
11.2
11.6
4.7
10.2
5.0
41.9
41.0
35.8
–
–
0.9
0.9
Source: IMF (1999b).
and provides significant finance for lower tiers of government, whose
expenditure is also limited. In the EU’s case it is the lower tier, the member
states’ central governments, that control the vast majority of taxes and derive
the revenue from them, thus the finance for the EU derives from these national
sources and it is the EU’s expenditure that is subject to strict limitation.
European Union budgetary expenditure is concentrated on a narrow range
of policies that are not significant for national governments (see Table 4.3).
Agricultural plus structural /regional policies alone account for more than 80
per cent of expenditure. The only other important areas of expenditure are
research, external action and administration. Research covers EU funding of
collaborative scientific projects under a series of framework programmes.
External action expenditure reflects the EU’s growing role in external relations particularly in relation to Central and Eastern Europe. Administrative
expenditure is a fairly large part of the budget because one of the most
important roles of the European Commission is monitoring the operation of
policies and regulations implemented by the member states.
The distribution of expenditure between levels of government in nation
states is shown in Tables 4.4 and 4.5. Even the federal governments of very
decentralized nation states such as Switzerland and the United States have
levels of central government expenditure many times that of the EU. Member
states have large public sectors with total expenditure amounting to 40–50
per cent of GDP. The highest tier of government accounts for most of that
expenditure even in a federal state such as Germany. The largest categories of
national government expenditure are social security, health, education,
defence and debt interest, none of which are significant for the EU. There are
very major differences between these policies in different countries reflecting
different histories, cultures and preferences. This diversity is part of the reason
88 Brian Ardy
Table 4.3 EU budgetary expenditure
1997
Agricultural levies
CAP markets
Structural operations
Research
External action
Administration
Other
Total expenditure: ECU/Euro millions
Total expenditure: % of EU GDP
1.2%
50.3%
32.8%
3.8%
4.9%
5.1%
2.7%
80,236
1.01
1998
1999
1.3%
48.1%
35.1%
3.9%
5.0%
5.2%
2.6%
80,713
1.06
1.4%
49.5%
33.2%
3.2%
5.7%
5.6%
2.7%
80,301
1.10
Source: European Court of Auditors (1998, 1999, 2000) Annual Report, Luxembourg.
Table 4.4 National central government expenditure by function, 1997 (% GDP)
Defence
Education Health
Social
security
Debt
interest
Other
Total
Federal states
Australia
United States
Switzerland
Germany*
1.7
3.2
1.5
1.3
1.8
0.4
0.6
0.2
3.4
4.3
5.5
6.4
8.7
6.0
14.1
16.9
1.7
3.1
0.9
2.4
1.0
1.4
0.0
5.3
18.4
18.4
22.6
31.9
Unitary states
France**
Sweden
United Kingdom
2.5
2.3
2.7
3.3
2.4
1.6
10.0
0.1
5.5
17.9
21.0
14.0
2.7
5.4
3.5
6.6
7.6
3.2
43.0
38.8
30.5
EU
0.0
0.0
0.0
–
–
1.0
1.0
Source: IMF (1999b).
Note
Germany* 1996; France** 1993.
for the very great reluctance to transfer these policies to the EU, and thus they
remain firmly under national control. The EU, therefore, has a pattern of
expenditure that is totally different from that of national governments.
The difference between the EU and national budgets has potentially important implications for EMU. The small size of the budget and the fact that it
has to balance means that it cannot have a macroeconomic stabilizing role for
EMU. Although the structural policies do involve redistribution between
member states (Ardy, 2002) they cannot provide interregional insurance. This
is because the distribution of expenditure is based on a bidding process with
long time lags. Nearly 70 per cent of expenditure is concentrated in poorer
regions whatever the macroeconomic situation.15 The relatively small size of
these transfers16 also means that their macroeconomic impact is likely to be
limited.
The development of EU Budget and EMU 89
Table 4.5 Government expenditure by level of government, 1997 (% of nominal GDP)
Central
government
Social
security
Central
and social
security
State and
local
government
Total
government
expenditure
Federal states
Australia
United States
Switzerland
Germany*
9.6
12.3
8.2
14.3
8.7
6.0
14.1
16.9
18.4
18.4
22.3
31.2
14.0
10.3
10.3
13.3
32.4
28.6
32.7
44.5
Unitary states
France
Sweden
United Kingdom
28.9
17.8
16.5
17.2
21.0
14.0
46.1
38.8
30.5
9.8
22.2
11.1
55.9
60.9
41.6
Source: IMF (1999b).
Note
Germany* 1996
Is the restricted EU Budget a problem for monetary union?
Euro area stabilization
The EU Budget under its current restrictions is unable to provide stabilization
for EMU either as a whole, or for its regions. Aggregate stabilization is ruled
out by the small size of the EU Budget and the requirement for it to balance
every year. Interregional insurance is ruled out by the way in which the level of
expenditure in particular regions is determined. The situation in the EU to an
extent inverts that in national monetary unions: most tax revenue and
expenditure remains the responsibility of national governments, which for the
EU is the regional rather than the federal level.
The norm in fiscal federations is for the federal government to determine
the overall fiscal stance with the budgets of lower tiers regulated. With the
EU Budget balanced, the overall fiscal stance in EMU is the sum of the
national fiscal stances but subject to EU regulation. This regulation is via the
Stability and Growth Pact (SGP), which is a classic EU mix of legal regulation
and intergovernmental co-operation. The SGP consists of two regulations,
first for surveillance (Council of the EU, 1997a) and second for excessive
deficits (Council of the EU, 1997b). Surveillance seeks to ensure that member
states’ budgetary plans are such that they will avoid excessive deficits with
compliance achieved by peer pressure and the possibility of adverse publicity,17 because the only sanction is a recommendation to a member state to
modify policy. Fiscal policy is more tightly controlled by the Excessive Deficit
Procedure. When a country’s deficit exceeds 3 per cent of GDP the Economic
and Finance Council of the EU can decide by a qualified majority that an
90 Brian Ardy
excessive deficit exists, make recommendations for its correction, and impose
penalties if the member state fails to remedy the situation. Excessive deficits
are those exceeding 3 per cent of GDP except where the excess is not exceptional and temporary. Penalties include non-interest bearing deposits and,
ultimately, fines.
These procedures are geared to the achievement of medium-term budgetary
positions close to balance or in surplus. If this is achieved then the overall
fiscal stance for EMU should correspond to one appropriate to the cyclical
economic situation as a result of the operation of automatic stabilizers. Thus,
below average growth for the euro zone will lead to an automatic counter-cycle
expansion of the aggregate public sector deficit caused by falling tax revenues
and rising expenditure. If, in the medium term, national budgets are close to
balance this will give sufficient headroom for the automatic stabilizing
response to a recession. Given the continuance of a small EU budget and large
national budgets, discretionary fiscal policy at the euro zone level would mean
requiring individual governments to adjust their budgetary policies to
achieve the overall EU stance. This is not politically feasible as member states
would not be prepared to change taxation/public expenditure to achieve the
necessary euro zone budgetary stance. Thus, it is not surprising that the EU
has opted for the fiscal stance of the euro zone to be determined by automatic
stabilizers within an overall framework of responsible budgetary policies.
With the EU Budget balanced and national budgets over the medium-term
the overall fiscal stance for EMU is also one of balance. Although such fiscal
rectitude seems desirable this could be questioned. One problem is that
governments need to be debtors in order to provide the necessary depth and
liquidity to financial markets. To an extent corporate debt can fulfil this
function but would not offer the security and portfolio possibilities of
government debt (Gordon, 1997). The need for balance also rules out the
possibility of the government borrowing to cover investment, the ‘golden rule’
policy that Gordon Brown is currently following in the United Kingdom.
Thus the United Kingdom’s current expenditure and revenue plans do not fit
the EU’s Broad Economic Policy Guidelines (Ecofin, 2001) and have also been
criticised by the IMF (2001). Given the current importance ascribed to public
investment in education and infrastructure as necessary for competitiveness,
reductions in public investment could adversely affect rates of economic growth.
The continuance of large national budgets means that inter-temporal
stabilization is still possible via changes in these national budgets.18 Given
that inter-temporal stabilization is possible at the national level does not
mean that it is optimal at the national level. There may be gains from
operating fiscal policy over the larger federal area, for example liquidity effects
on public debt may mean that debt is cheaper and, thus, the costs of intertemporal stabilization are lower (Martin, 1998: 197). A fiscal federation will
also have a higher potential to stabilize against shocks unless the national
component in income variation is negligible.19
The development of EU Budget and EMU 91
Interregional stabilization, insurance and redistribution
Interregional stabilization is not, however, possible using either national or
EU budgets. So how important is this stabilization and how much of a
problem is its absence? The large transfers between regions in monetary
unions in developed countries were estimated for the MacDougall Report
(MacDougall et al., 1977), which indicated that interregional flows of public
finance reduced long run per-capita income differences between regions by
between 25 and 53 per cent. This conflated the redistribution and stabilization elements of the flows. The first attempt to separate these elements was
carried out by Sala-i-Martin and Sachs (1992), who regressed log-levels of US
regional transfers and taxes on personal income. The results suggested that tax
and transfers offset 35–44 per cent of variations in US regional income. Thus,
despite the flexibility of private interregional adjustment in the United
States20 there is still a heavy reliance on fiscal transfers.
The high estimate of stabilization by Sala-i-Martin and Sachs prompted
criticism that their method confused stabilization with redistribution. Thus,
von Hagen (1992) regressed changes in regional taxes and transfers on changes
in regional income, and found that the stabilizing effect was only 10 per cent.
Unfortunately the results are not directly comparable; von Hagen uses Gross
State Product per-capita which is larger than personal incomes – also there is a
much more limited coverage of taxation, for example social security contributions are omitted (Goodhart and Smith, 1993). Both these factors would tend
to reduce the estimated extent of stabilization – with a wider coverage of
taxation Goodhart and Smith (1993) suggest the stabilizing effect would be
20 per cent. This result is similar to that obtained by Pisani-Ferry et al. (1993)
who used a simulation model to estimate regional stabilization effect in the
United States of 17 per cent. Bayoumi and Masson’s (1996) results indicate
that using personal income rather than GSP is likely to lead to higher values of
stabilization with an estimated 30 per cent. But their specification is also
different with stabilization measured by yearly differences but redistribution
by long-run averages of levels.
Melitz and Zumer (1998) who attempt a reconciliation of these competing
results, estimate stabilization at 20 per cent and redistribution of 17 per cent
for the United States. They demonstrate that the higher estimates of stabilization obtained by Sala-i-Martin and Sachs (1992) and Bayoumi and Masson
(1996) are the result of the use of state personal income rather than gross state
product, together with the inclusion of grants to lower tiers of government.
With the exceptions noted, there seems to be fairly general agreement among
these studies that in the United States around 20 per cent of the fluctuations in
gross state product are offset by fluctuations in federal taxes and transfers.
There are, however, four recent studies that come to a much lower figure of
around 10 per cent (Obstfeld and Peri, 1998; Fatas, 1998; Asdrubali et al.,
1996; Melitz and Zumer, 1999). Obstfeld and Peri’s lower estimate is due to a
92 Brian Ardy
different specification and estimation technique (a bivariate VAR). These
estimates are particularly low considering the dependent variable is relative
regional per-capita person income and such low estimates are perhaps due to
the dynamic properties of the model. The other authors have more profound
critiques of the established methods.
Fatas (1998) argues that estimated stabilization effects include both intertemporal stabilization as well as interregional insurance. He estimates interregional stabilization separately as the reduction in the volatility of regional
permanent income21 relative to pre-tax income, giving an average value of 11
per cent. There are, however, some questions over his methodology (Andersen,
1998). The relatively low stabilization in the United States is not just the
result of low levels of transfers, it is also due to the high correlation and low
persistence of shocks across states. Europe suffers from much more persistent
shocks so Fatas’ argument that stabilization should concentrate on short-term
shocks has been questioned (Forni and Reichlin, 1999). ‘A fiscal federation by
acting through cross-sectional transfers can in principle reduce both short and
long run variance’ (Forni and Reichlin, 2001: 124).
The role of private capital markets is crucial in cushioning regional specific
shocks in the United States (Atkeson and Bayoumi; 1993. Sorensen and
Yasha, 1996). Using accounting identities to decompose regional income into
its components and then analysing their fluctuations provides another route
to estimate stabilization. Asdrubali et al. (1996) find that only 13 per cent of
shocks are offset by the federal government, but the role of financial markets is
crucial: 39 per cent of shocks are offset by cross-regional ownership claims to
output and 23 per cent by the extension of credit on an interregional basis.
Using a corrected specification and estimation procedure, Melitz and Zumer
(1999) have a similar estimate of 13 per cent for the effect of federal stabilization but the role of financial markets and credit are equally important, each
offsetting 24 per cent of the shock.22
Thus far the analysis has concentrated on estimates of stabilization for the
United States, a monetary union comparable in size to EMU. Whether it is a
good basis for comparison with EMU could be questioned because of its much
higher level of interregional labour mobility and lower level of unemployment persistence (Obstfeld and Peri, 1998). Another fundamental difference
between EMU and the United States is the much lower level of interregional
credit and ownership of assets in EMU. Whilst the cross-border ownership of
assets grows and credit markets develop, EMU may be vulnerable to shocks.
The lower ability of the EU economies to absorb interregional shocks is
perhaps reflected in the higher degrees of interregional stabilization estimated
for EU countries. Estimates for the United Kingdom (Goodhart and Smith,
1993), Germany and France (Pisani-Ferry, 1993) and Italy (Decressin, 1999)
suggest national stabilization offsets somewhere between 20–40 per cent of
changes in regional incomes. Melitz and Zumer’s (1998) estimates are towards
the bottom of this range with around 20 per cent for the United Kingdom
and France.
The development of EU Budget and EMU 93
European Monetary Union, of course, lacks any significant interregional
stabilization between its regions; is its absence a significant problem? This
depends upon how significant asymmetric shocks23 will be and the efficacy of
other adjustment mechanisms. The ERM and the convergence process of
monetary integration seemed to enhance the synchronization of European
business cycles (Artis and Zhang, 1999) and it seems likely that EMU will
further intensify this process. The national economies24 of EMU remain
diversified so their vulnerability to asymmetric shocks and, consequently, the
need for interregional stabilization is less. But will the intensification of
integration implied by EMU lead to greater specialization and hence
vulnerability? By stimulating restructuring and promoting the mobility of
factors of production, EMU enhances both economic integration and
competitive pressures. It can be argued that this will tend to encourage the
concentration of economic activity. This is because, as trade costs fall,
agglomeration economies and supply side linkages become more important,
and the cost disadvantages of concentration will be limited by factor mobility
and factor inflows limit (Krugman and Venables, 1990, 1995, 1996;
Krugman, 1991). These effects may be reinforced by a dynamic interaction
between agglomeration and R&D. Working in the opposite direction are cost
differentials that remain in the EU, together with congestion costs and
differences in the cost of non-tradeable services, which will encourage
dispersion. Thus, the impact of the single currency on specialization is an
empirical question, but the evidence is ambiguous. While providing some
support for the variables important to the ‘new geography’ models, there is no
very great evidence of significant agglomeration (Braunerhjelm et al., 2000).
Thus, by comparison with the United States, European national economies are
perhaps less vulnerable to asymmetric shocks than United States but Europe
at present lacks adjustment mechanisms such as labour mobility and cross
border capital holdings and flows.
The absence of significant international transfers in the EU means that
EMU lacks interregional redistribution as well as stabilization. In reality it is
difficult to separate these two elements and in the absence of a specially
constructed interregional stabilization mechanism the lack of redistribution
also implies the lack of stabilization. Justification for redistribution may be
political (the need for some equity in living standards to maintain the
solidarity of the nation state) or economic (that efficiency will be enhanced). In
EMU it could be argued that the political argument for redistribution is
relatively weak. The euro zone is far from a homogeneous area in terms of
citizenship, culture and language. The differences in income levels are such
that it could be counterproductive to encourage the idea that they should be
similar across the area. At the moment there is only limited attachment to a
European identity among the citizens of Europe. Within nation states such as
Belgium, Italy and Canada it is proving increasingly difficult to maintain
existing regional transfers. The failure to agree on even small increases in
the EU Budget to finance enlargement indicates an unwillingness among
94 Brian Ardy
governments to finance large transfers. The economic case for interregional
redistribution is also relatively weak and there are a number of problems with
such redistribution. Transfers in the short term would boost income and
economic activity in the region but this might lead to higher factor prices
blunting productivity gains and innovation necessary for competitiveness.
Continuing grants could create a situation of dependency, beset by problems
of moral hazard25 and inefficient projects.
Regional stabilization schemes
Is it possible to develop an effective regional stabilization scheme that is
politically acceptable? Such a scheme would have to meet certain criteria
(Goodhart and Smith, 1993). It should be temporary, being triggered by a fall
in economic activity and suspended when the economy stabilizes. Timing is
also crucial; the instrument should come into effect when economic activity is
weakening. These requirements are extended by the Commission of the EC
(1993b: 79–80) – any stabilization should only apply country-specific
asymmetric shocks that presents serious economic difficulties. Von Hagen
and Hammond (1995) suggest some further requirements: transfers for each
country should average zero, payments into the system should therefore equal
receipts from it, ideally every year. To be worthwhile the scheme should offset
a large part of the relevant shocks.
In practice it is difficult to meet these requirements although there have
been two proposed schemes (Italianer and Vanheukelen, 1993; Melitz and
Vori, 1993). Unemployment is used to measure shocks in the Italianer and
Vanheukelen scheme because data is rapidly available and in a harmonized
form. With this scheme it is suggested similar stabilization to the United
States can be achieved with an average budget of around 0.2 per cent of GDP.
It has been argued (Melitz, 1994) that this unemployment based scheme
would provide only very small benefits under rare circumstances. The lagging
nature of unemployment as an economic indicator and the arbitrariness of
relating changes in unemployment and the size of transfers also argue against
its use. The Melitz and Vori scheme aims to provide stabilization via transfers
related to deviations of a country’s per-capita income level from a national
reference value derived from a deterministic trend. They find, however, that
shocks among potential EMU members are moderately persistent and positively correlated so that the potential for insurance is small.
What these schemes indicate is that it is very difficult to establish a
practical scheme, which will meet the criteria necessary to be acceptable to EU
member states. Von Hagen and Hammond (1995) demonstrate that it is
possible to devise an effective stabilization scheme with no persistent distributional effects. This scheme is, however, based on an ‘intricate econometric
procedure’ (p. 348) upon which it would difficult to achieve agreement in the
EU. The size of contributions and receipts is relatively large particularly for
small countries.26 Thus Ireland’s maximum benefit is 4.04 per cent of GDP
The development of EU Budget and EMU 95
and maximum contribution 4.39 per cent. Even for the United Kingdom the
maximum benefit is 2.45 per cent of GDP and the maximum contribution
2.85 per cent. It is difficult to see member states being prepared to accept
these potential commitments under any circumstances let alone under a
complex econometric formula. Unfortunately less complex formulations lose
the effective properties of the econometric scheme, with transfers becoming
permanent and incorrect in size and direction. This is not the case with a
smaller core of the original six plus Denmark, indicating that perhaps this is
less of a problem with the more convergent EMU that has emerged. Most
damming of all ‘insurance against asymmetric shocks need not reduce the
variability of output and employment over time even it stabilizes fluctuations
around a common trend’ (Von Hagen and Hammond, 1995: 348). Although
this is the result of simulations, and generalizations are not strictly possible, it
does suggest that the benefits of interregional insurance scheme for EMU
could be relatively small.
Conclusion
The EU Budget as currently constituted is unable to undertake two roles
usually assumed by central/federal budgets in monetary unions: stabilization
and redistribution. For the present redistribution between member states is
probably not that important because the media and public attention continues
to focus on the national rather than the EMU/EU level. So it is redistribution
between individuals and regions within nations rather than between nation
which is crucial for the time being. Paradoxically, the more successful the EU
is in fostering an attachment to a European identity, the more problematic
this could be. Thus the more the EU comes to resemble a nation state the
greater the demands for a budget with redistributive capabilities are likely to
become.
There are two aspects to stabilization: first an overall macroeconomic stance
for the euro zone compatible with monetary policy; and second stabilization
between nation states within the euro zone to offset asymmetric shocks. The
evidence does suggest that there is substantial stabilization in macroeconomic
activity between regions within nation states, as a result of the activities of
federal/central budgets. The EU Budget cannot provide this interregional
stabilization but its absence is mitigated by two factors. First, the national as
opposed to the EU or regional (sub-national), component in macroeconomic
instability is relatively small. Second, member states retain some flexibility to
counter national macroeconomic shocks by using national fiscal policy. The
EMU system does, therefore, contain sufficient national fiscal adjustment
possibilities. The Growth and Stability Pact is the major mechanism EMU has
to adjust the overall fiscal stance to achieve compatibility with monetary
policy. With monetary used for short run stabilization, the GSP provision
provides an appropriate fiscal stance for EMU, with medium-term budgetary
balance and the short-term fiscal stance determined by automatic stabilizers.
96 Brian Ardy
Attempts at increased co-ordination of fiscal policy would inevitably limit
national budgetary autonomy, and thus require a politically unacceptable
expansion and reform of the EU Budget to enhance its capacity to achieve
regional stabilization. Thus despite their unorthodoxy, the budgetary arrangements for EMU arguably provide a viable system which fulfils the macroeconomic functions of a ‘normal’ federal budget. This is just as well because
national stances are such that, for the foreseeable future, EMU is destined to
continue in its unique configuration as a monetary union without a fiscal
federation.
Notes
1 Research arising out of ESRC: One Europe or Several? Programme award no.
L213252034.
2 The only exception is monetary unions involving a micro-state, e.g. Belgium and
Luxembourg.
3 The term ‘region’ is used in this chapter to refer to sub-national units of federal
states, e.g. Lander in Germany, but to individual nation states within EMU.
4 The suggestion that discretionary fiscal policy does not succeed in stabilizing the
economy is, however, controversial: Noord (2000) presents evidence that for the
OECD as a whole and the United States in particular there was a significant
stabilizing effect from discretionary policy.
5 Countries with large deficits and debt would find these rising to unsustainable
levels in a recession and may, therefore, have to act counter-cyclically, tightening
policy by increasing taxes and/or reducing government expenditure. Thus in the
early 1990s, even without the Maastricht convergence requirements, EU countries
would have been forced into fiscal consolidation despite the recessionary
conditions. This meant that for the euro area as opposed to the OECD a neutral
discretionary fiscal policy would have been less volatile than the discretionary
policy actually employed (Noord, 2000).
6 For example it is difficult for governments to run large surpluses when tax
revenues are buoyant.
7 Automatic stabilizers are changes in budget deficits, which tend to offset
variations in economic activity. Thus, if growth slows the public sector deficit
increases; as tax revenue falls and expenditure rises; this adds to demand in the
economy reducing the extent of the fall in economic growth.
8 This either requires that policy acts without lags or that government forecasting of
economic activity is accurate. Another potential benefit of automatic stabilizers is
the potential absence of a recognition and implementation lag in their operation.
9 These restrictions can take various forms such as: limitations on local taxation or
expenditure or balanced budget rules.
10 The withholding tax.
11 Small deficits and surpluses do emerge but these are not allowed to cumulate.
12 Agricultural levies were variable taxes on agricultural imports. Sugar levies are a
charge on sugar producers for production in excess of a defined output quota.
13 The maximum rate was increased to 1.4 per cent in 1984 and back to 1 per cent in
1992.
14 Planned expenditure has to be kept below this level to allow a margin for
expenditure overruns.
15 Thus from the mid-1990s Ireland has enjoyed exceptional rates of economic
growth but still receives substantial structural expenditure from the EU.
The development of EU Budget and EMU 97
16 For smaller member states, when combined with the effects of agricultural policy
the transfers can be quite large, but this small size of the budget means this cannot
be the case for larger states such as Spain.
17 Adverse publicity could exact a price, undermining confidence in the government
and its debt leading to an interest rate premium. Paradoxically when Ireland was
the first country to have recommendation against it, the Irish government sought
to use this to their electoral advantage by sticking to their policy in the face of what
they claimed was EU intimidation.
18 Provided that in the medium term national budgets are in balance or close to
surplus, so that the excessive deficit limit is not binding.
19 Although it is not negligible Forni and Reichlin (2001) suggest that the relatively
small 75 per cent of output variance is explained by global or local factors.
20 Via migration and integrated capital markets, see following section.
21 Regional permanent income is defined as regional income less future taxes on the
region necessary to finance the current public sector deficit.
22 The model does not yield significant results when estimated for the United
Kingdom and Italy.
23 Possibly also asymmetric responses to common shocks.
24 It is national economies that are important here because the persistence of
large national budgets means that interregional transfers can continue within
nation states, albeit constrained by the requirement of the Stability and Growth
Pact.
25 The adoption of policy actions aimed to continue receipt of transfers rather than
facilitate development.
26 This is due to the greater effect of asymmetric shocks on such countries.
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100 Brian Ardy
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Part III
EMU and fiscal federalism
5
Stabilization in EMU
A critical review
Robert Ackrill
Introduction
Despite much advice to the contrary, EMU has started without the European
Union having the means to undertake economic stabilization across the euro
area. The purpose of this chapter is to question whether this is an important
omission. To consider this, we reassess fiscal federalism and draw it together
with the principle of subsidiarity. We argue that the traditional fiscal federalism paradigm, developed in the context of a single country, can lead to
erroneous policy prescriptions if applied without qualification to the European
Union. We agree with the observation that the ‘standard model of fiscal
federalism is not appropriate for Europe. It relies on a functional specialisation
at each level of government, emphasising the provision of local public goods
while the main redistributive responses are undertaken by central government’ (Hughes and Smith, 1991: 452). We consider a range of theoretical and
empirical issues, relevant shock symmetry or asymmetry and examine national
stabilization efforts. We conclude that, on balance, there is no compelling
evidence to force the European Union to introduce a stabilization scheme at
the EU level. Moreover, there is considerable and growing evidence that, so
long as flexibility in national fiscal policies is maintained, national budgets
can provide sufficient stabilization. Through EMU, continued convergence can
help reinforce this conclusion.
Setting up the problem – limitations and terminology
In this first section, we address a small but important point – the language of
fiscal federalism. Starting with the following quote from Oates (1972: 14), we
see how confused terminology can lead to confused policy prescriptions:
The central government presumably accepts primary responsibility for
stabilizing the economy, for achieving the most equitable distribution of
income, and for providing certain public goods that influence significantly
the welfare of all members of society. Complementing these operations,
subcentral governments can supply those public goods that are of primary
interest only to the residents of their respective jurisdictions.
(Oates, 1972)
104 Robert Ackrill
This indicates clearly where the fiscal function of stabilization should be
assigned in a single country fiscal federation. ‘Central’ refers to the national/
federal government. When the European Union is considered, however, it is
by no means clear that it is appropriate simply to reassign the term ‘central’
and, crucially, its associated fiscal functions to the European Union. To apply
fiscal federalism to the Union, a clearer terminology is required. This chapter
uses the term national when referring to that level of government. ‘Federal’ is
unhelpful as it refers to a specific form of government and it becomes
extremely confusing (and politically loaded) when used in the context of the
Union. In addition, lower levels of government (that is, those covering a
geographical area within the borders of a country) are referred to as subnational levels of government, whilst the European Union is referred to as the
supra-national level. The terms ‘government’ and ‘fiscal authority’ are,
however, used interchangeably, partly because the European Union is not a
‘government’ in the normal meaning of that term.
To this, we can add an important idea from Forte (1977: 321–22), whereby
the ‘highest level of government is that where the ultimate tax power lies and
thus has the right to enter in any sphere of taxation and public debt which has
not yet been given (presumably by itself) to the other levels of government.
For public expenditures there may be a similar distinction. The highest
government may be allowed to spend where it likes, unless the contrary is
specified, while the other may be prevented from doing so.’ Within most
countries, the ‘highest’ and ‘broadest’ levels of government coincide, whereas
with the European Union this is not the case. We may describe the Union as
the broadest, whereas member states remain the highest for most fiscal
functions.
In seeking to extend the fiscal federalism paradigm to include the European
Union, there is no definitive formula to help, but we can draw upon the
concept of subsidiarity. This has many definitions and is not sufficiently
developed to be testable in law, but its essence is captured by defining it as the
allocation of government functions to the national level, unless the Union
should be the lowest effective level of government.1 It is this idea that will
underpin the subsequent discussion. As a footnote to this section, it is noted
that Masson (1996) provides the heading ‘Is Fiscal Federalism Desirable/
Necessary in Europe?’ for his discussion of this topic. This serves to emphasise
how much EMU is confusing the fiscal federalism debate, as this wording (and
Masson is not alone in doing this) implies that it is only fiscal federalism if
functions currently assigned to national governments are re-assigned to the
European Union. In practice, it is fiscal federalism even if the re-assignment of
fiscal functions from the national to supra-national tier is rejected.
Fiscal tiers and the assignment of fiscal functions
Following on from the above discussion on fiscal tiers, this section discusses
the role of, and relationship between, each tier. It will, in particular, challenge
Stabilization in EMU 105
the assumption implicit in much that is written on stabilization in EMU, that
monetary union means the European Union becoming the highest (in Forte’s
terms) fiscal tier. Sub-national governments are allocated various fiscal
functions, but one common feature of sub-national budgets is the imposition
(usually by the national government) of a balanced budget rule requiring
revenue and expenditure to be equal each fiscal year. The existing literature
(see, inter alia, Alesina and Perotti, 1995, 1996; Corsetti and Roubini, 1996;
Poterba, 1994, 1996) supports the view that with sub-national governments,
this helps prevent a budget deficit. Corsetti and Roubini (1996) find that, in
practice, sub-national governments may be allowed to undertake some borrowing, accumulate ‘rainy-day’ reserves and receive national/federal budget
transfers which can act as quasi-automatic stabilisers for those lower-level
governments. Poterba (1996) argues that in the United States, those states
that reduce spending to keep within short term budget limits also have lower
levels of spending in the long run. It is pertinent also to note that the states in
the United States have adopted these rules themselves rather than having
them imposed from above and that they are ‘unique’ in this.2 By doing this,
the greater fiscal discipline (as confirmed by Poterba) allowed the states to
maintain the ability ‘to borrow in financial markets’ (ibid.).
If balanced budget rules promote fiscal restraint, why are they not more
widely imposed on national budgets? Alesina and Perotti (1996) suggest that
whilst balanced budget laws are appropriate for sub-national governments,
they are not so for national governments. Specifically, they identify the suboptimal nature of forcing fiscal policies to respond with increased volatility in
order to maintain balance each and every year.3 In particular, it is the
stabilization function and the associated fiscal instruments (as discussed
below) that create the year-to-year fluctuations that would be compromized
by such rules. Thus the national government (usually) not only imposes a
balanced budget rule on the sub-national government, it also does not impose
the same rule on itself, in part because of the assignment of the stabilization
function that causes fluctuations in budget balances.
The EU Budget also operates under a balanced budget rule. Strasser (1992:
57) argues it was the wish of the authors of the Treaty of Rome not ‘to offer the
Communities, and in particular the Commission, any easy solutions’ to the
financing of EU activities. Before considering further whether or not stabilization should be re-assigned to the European Union, it is asserted at this
point that stabilization will not, for the foreseeable future, be re-assigned.
Picking up on one point from Forte noted earlier, this rule is imposed by
national governments on the supra-national level just as it is (in most cases) on
sub-national governments. In other words, even though the national governments are not the broadest fiscal authority, they continue to be the highest/
ultimate authority (and they also retain ultimate political legitimacy). Subnational governments are typically limited in the range of fiscal functions they
are assigned. These limits can be thought of as applying a fortiori to a supranational government, because it is further away from voters.4 Within the
106 Robert Ackrill
European Union the principle of subsidiarity is, moreover, designed to ensure
that fiscal and other functions are only assigned to the supra-national level
when this is more efficient than assigning the function to national governments (for example, by lowering co-ordination costs, or where there are
significant international spillover effects from policies).
There are two further issues related to the unwillingness to re-assign
stabilization, the second of which also forms the basis of the argument that, for
now, there is arguably no need to re-assign this particular fiscal function.
First, ever since the MacDougall Report (EC Commission, 1977) it has been
argued that the further re-assignment of fiscal functions to the European
Union would require a much larger EU budget. Always looking unlikely, the
Agenda 2000 budget agreement reached in Berlin in March 1999 confirmed
that, for the period to 2006 at least, the size of the budget as a percentage of
EU GNP will remain constant – even though it is anticipated that further
enlargement will occur during that time. Unless stabilization was located
outside of the main EU Budget, the balanced budget rule and the continuing
very tight limits imposed on the EU Budget would be inadequate for effective
stabilization. Moreover, the EU member states would be unlikely to provide
such a rise in funding when imposing fiscal discipline on the core EU Budget
and on themselves, through the Stability and Growth Pact (see below).
The second issue is a factor that is central to the assignment and functioning
of stabilization, yet one that is all-too frequently overlooked (though note
Italianer and Pisani-Ferry, 1994). The problem with imposing balanced
budget rules on national budgets was the constraint they would impose on the
functioning of stabilization. This arises fundamentally because of the nature of
instruments through which stabilization is effected. Accepting that fiscal
instruments will not be used for active demand management (European
Commission 1998 argues that a lack of stability in fiscal policy was a major
factor in the poor growth and unemployment records of European countries in
the early 1990s) and that the ECB will not use monetary instruments in that
way (see the ECB Monthly Bulletin of January 1999, p. 42, for confirmation of
this), then the primary remaining means by which stabilization will be
undertaken is through automatic stabilizers, such as unemployment benefits
and direct income taxes.
These instruments share two characteristics: they are very sensitive
politically and are therefore assigned to (or, rather, ‘retained by’) the national
fiscal authority. As these fiscal instruments operate through the economic
cycle or in response to economic shocks, so the budget balance rises and falls.
To try to force the national budget to balance each year could, therefore, act to
destabilise the economy if it required the government to undertake procyclical discretionary measures to comply with the balanced budget rule, rather
than let the budget surplus/deficit rise and fall with the functioning of nondiscretionary automatic stabilizers. The importance of automatic stabilizers
and the potentially counter-productive effects of discretionary fiscal policy is
discussed in Andersen and Dogonowski (1999).
Stabilization in EMU 107
It is therefore critically important for fiscal federalism to look not only at
where fiscal powers are assigned, but also who determines the assignment of
fiscal functions and, crucially in this case, the nature of the instruments
through which the particular fiscal function operates. Thus the national
governments remain the highest fiscal authority, even though they are no
longer the broadest within the European Union. This is particularly important as the Union is governed by the Treaty of Rome, which can only be
changed with the unanimous agreement of all member states. When the fiscal
instruments in question are as politically sensitive as those central to
automatic fiscal stabilization, political considerations play a vital role in
determining the re-assignment (or not) of policy. We need, however, to
consider whether this is important in economic terms.
A detailed analysis of stabilization in EMU – and the application of fiscal
federalism – is problematic for several reasons. Fiscal federalism is a very
difficult concept to test empirically ex ante and, especially with EMU, might
be subject to the Lucas Critique (a problem compounded in the case of
Optimum Currency Area criteria by their endogeneity – see below – which
also undermines any comparisons made with the United States). Thus in
considering the appropriateness of EU stabilization at the current time (and
this chapter does not deny the possibility that EU stabilization might one day
become a policy imperative), a series of issues are raised which, when taken
together, suggest to this author that the re-assignment of stabilization is not yet
needed, but which also indicate areas where further research could usefully be
undertaken to attempt to identify more clearly when the time might be right.
Optimum currency areas, asymmetric shocks and fiscal
federalism
This is not the place for a detailed discussion on OCA theory. Even so, there
are some issues that need examination in the context of stabilization. The
primary focus of OCA theory is identifying which countries are best suited to
forming a sustainable currency area (strictly, the term ‘optimum’ is a misnomer), particularly in the face of asymmetric shocks. There is, however, a
particular problem encountered in trying to use OCA theory to identify
countries suited to forming a currency area. The work of Frankel and Rose
(1997, 1998) in particular indicates that OCA criteria are actually endogenous – the act of forming a monetary union will, of itself, lead participating
countries to reflect more closely the criteria that OCA theory highlights (see
also Fontagné and Freudenberg (1999) on how shocks may well become more
symmetric with integration). In addition to creating difficulties in predicting
the future for EMU, it also provides one reason (others are discussed later) why
it is problematic to make a comparison between EMU and the monetary union
that is the United States, since the latter has been a monetary union for many
decades and will inevitably come closer to satisfying the OCA criteria than one
only just formed.
108 Robert Ackrill
Labour mobility is a central element in OCA theory. The starting point is
the work of Mundell (1961), who saw labour mobility as one alternative shock
absorbing mechanism to accommodate asymmetric shocks in the absence of
flexible nominal exchange rate. Three questions arise on labour mobility. The
first is how mobile does labour have to be in order to be considered ‘mobile’
rather than ‘immobile’? The second is what sort of mobility is being referred
to – geographical, occupational, mobility into and out of the labour market?
This will be returned to shortly, in using the examples of the United States
and European Union to identify when different types of mobility might be
relevant.
The third question is – is this even what Mundell said? Intuitively it seems
strange to put so much emphasis on a variable that is so hard to pin down (note
the first question above). A closer reading of Mundell’s argument, however,
reveals an argument that does make sense. OCA theory seeks to distinguish
between countries that are suited to sharing a currency and those that are not –
that is, distinguishing between insiders and outsiders. Mundell therefore
argues (p. 661) that the key issue is the difference between interregional and
intraregional labour mobility (although he does not use those terms), thus
implicitly referring to geographical mobility (but see also below).
This implies that, for example, if labour mobility is low between France and
the United Kingdom, but is also low within those countries then, on the basis
that both France and the United Kingdom are sustainable currency areas, so
would the United Kingdom and France be able to form a sustainable currency
area, ceteris paribus. In short, Mundell’s argument does not preclude a monetary
union between countries if labour mobility is not very high within or between
each other, but does raise doubts if interregional mobility is significantly
lower than intraregional mobility. Data on labour mobility is scarce, but it
appears that whilst between-country mobility is low, so too is within-country
mobility. Eurostat figures indicate that both types of geographical labour
mobility were less than 1 per cent in 1992 with regard to the European Union.
Spain had very low internal mobility (about 0.5 per cent), Germany had the
highest (1.5 per cent), perhaps as a continuing result of unification, with the
United Kingdom in between (just over 1 per cent). The average was about 0.9
per cent. This compares with immigration into the European Union of about
0.67 per cent and mobility between countries of about 0.5 per cent (that is,
about the same as internal mobility in Spain, which is a sustainable currency
area). This contrasts with interregional mobility within the United States of
2–3 per cent.5
It is the case, moreover, that there are different types of mobility. The
Mundell argument clearly refers to geographical mobility. On what basis,
however, might occupational mobility or even mobility into and out of the
labour force be relevant? In order to consider this, we need to examine a
particular feature that distinguishes the US economy from that of the EU: the
extent to which each economy is based on inter-industry or intra-industry
specialization. There are two stages to this argument. First we compare inter-
Stabilization in EMU 109
industry and intra-industry specialization as traditionally defined. The
implication of this is simply that if an economy is based on inter-industry
lines, an industry-specific shock will also be a region-specific shock. In
contrast, with intra-industry specialization, not only will an industry-specific
shock have a smaller impact on a particular region, the impact will also be
more symmetric in its impact across different regions. Given this distinction,
the conclusion follows that geographical labour mobility might need to be
higher if the basis of specialization is more along inter-industry lines (as in the
United States compared with the European Union), because regardless of
whether the shock is primarily region- or industry-specific in its origins, it
will have a regional impact.6 In the European Union, moreover, mobility into
and out of the labour market appears to be more important than in the United
States (see Decressin and Fatás, 1995). Note also that if mobility is along
occupational lines, then flexibility through re-training may be of critical
importance to the European Union. In the meantime, shocks that bring about
symmetric rises in unemployment might still threaten national budgets (but
see below for more on this).
A second stage in this argument comes with recent developments in the
theory of intra-industry specialization (see, inter alia, Greenaway et al., 1995,
1999; Fontagné et al., 1998, Fontagné and Freudenberg, 1999). The distinction is now drawn between vertical and horizontal intra-industry trade, where
the latter conforms to ‘traditional’ intra-industry trade, whereas the former
implies specialization based on quality. Thus if intra-industry specialization is
horizontal in nature, the preceding argument applies. If specialization is along
vertical lines, however, the issues are not so clear. Moreover, there is growing
evidence that much intra-industry trade in the European Union is vertical. If
industries are analysed at low levels of disaggregation, the differences between
vertical and horizontal are minimal. If, however, extremely high levels of
disaggregation are used, it is possible to argue that vertical intra-industry
specialization is, de facto, akin to inter-industry specialization, with attendant
consequences for shock asymmetries.
Overall, however, this whole area is one where further research is required.
If there is substantial (horizontal) intra-industry specialization, is occupational mobility (or mobility into and out of the labour market) an adequate
substitute for geographical labour mobility? Given the growing evidence of
the importance of vertical intra-industry specialization, what implications
does this have for the analysis of the impact of shocks? Does it mean that any
shock will have an asymmetric impact, or is it the case that only highly
specific shocks, affecting narrowly defined, quality-differentiated sub-sections
of industries will have asymmetric effects under vertical intra-industry
specialization? This is a critical question to answer in order to understand
whether or not industry-specific shocks will have asymmetric effects under
vertical intra-industry specialization.
A separate issue, also important to the EMU debate, is how the nature of
specialization will change over time. Greater integration can, in theory, push
110 Robert Ackrill
an economy either towards greater regional specialization (as argued by Paul
Krugman), or towards greater similarity between regions (as Paul de Grauwe
argues is evidenced in the European Union by empirical studies).7 Indeed, it is
possible to suggest that since low labour mobility does not favour greater
industrial concentration,8 the Krugman view is less likely to prevail in the
European Union precisely because the geographical mobility of labour is
relatively low.
Thus, on the question of shock asymmetries, first there is much evidence
that indicates shocks in the European Union are not only likely to be more
symmetric than, say, in the United States, but that symmetry with grow
because of EMU. Second, the issue of labour mobility is complex and it is
suggested that, when comparisons with the United States are made, it is the
case that, to a degree, different types of mobility are at work in the different
labour markets. These points even question the extent to which fiscal
stabilization in EMU needs to be as great as that required by the United
States. Uncertainties remain over the degree to which industry-specific shocks
can be so specific as to affect different qualities of product. To quote Fontagné
and Freudenberg (1999: 281), the distinction between vertical and horizontal
intra-industry trade
is not likely to alter deeply our general message. In total, the share of trade
flows associated with symmetry in shocks will increase: the monetary
union will endogenously create the conditions of its success. Thus, the
empirical evidence of structural asymmetries between core and periphery
countries no longer justifies fears of cumulative divergence between
members, within the EMU.
(Fontagné and Freudenberg, 1999)
Stabilization – can national budgets do it all?
Automatic stabilization will remain in the hands of national governments
since, as indicated earlier, the relevant fiscal instruments will remain there. As
several authors indicate, however (see, inter alia, Italianer and Pisani-Ferry,
1994; Fatás, 1998), the act of stabilization when different regions’ incomes
move imperfectly together is likely to have a longer term impact on the overall
budget balance. When this is made up in terms of higher taxes or lower
expenditures, the impact of the stabilization is reduced. Thus it is that some
authors argue that the stabilization capacity of national budgets is lower than
some authors estimate. We follow the terminology of Fatás (1998) and
distinguish between inter-temporal transfers and interregional transfers (or
‘insurance’).
This distinction is important for two reasons. First, it qualifies the capacity
of national budgets to undertake stabilization, as estimated by the several
authors who do not allow for this distinction and thus over-estimate stabilization
Stabilization in EMU 111
capacity. Thus, for example, Sachs and Sala-i-Martin (1992) and Bayoumi and
Masson (1995) estimate the US budget stabilizes about 30 per cent of the
impact of a shock whereas, for example, Fatás puts the figure at about 10 per
cent. Second, this is crucial to the present argument, in that inter-temporal
transfers remain with the member states through the functioning of national
budgets (subject to a limit imposed on the overall budget balance – see the
next section), whereas substantial interregional transfers could require an EUlevel transfer system.
In estimating the stabilizing impact of budgets within the EU, the same
methodological caveat applies, but one result broadly consistent within most
studies is that the stabilizing capacity of national European budgets is
comparable to that of the United States (and typically higher than in Canada).
Given the distinction between inter-temporal and interregional transfers,
however, this is only significant insofar as it indicates that one element of
stabilization is comparable as between the European Union and mature,
sustainable currency areas. If, however, there is found to be a fundamental
need for interregional insurance within EMU, then the argument for some
form of supra-national transfers is strengthened.
Considering two studies that examine this particular point, both Fatás
(1998) and Forni and Reichlin (2001) argue that the greater the degree of
integration, the less there is to be gained by introducing an EU system of
insurance, because of greater symmetry in the movement of incomes (Fatás:
166–7) or output (Forni and Reichlin: 124–5). The key point these authors
make is that the evidence indicates a clear movement towards greater
integration and, therefore, a reduction over time in the benefits to be had from
introducing an EU system of insurance. This finding is reinforced by the
earlier discussion on the endogeneity of OCA criteria.
As for the estimates regarding interregional insurance, in addition to the
general points already noted, it is estimated by Fatás that in the United States,
of the overall stabilizing consequence of fiscal transfers, only about one third
represents interregional insurance (1998: 177). He goes on to examine the
contribution both national and European systems could provide on insurance.
He finds that, on average, national systems can provide over 50 per cent of that
provided by a European system, although (as with the US system), there are
regional variations. With its higher volatility, Spain is one country that could
potentially gain more from a European system of insurance. A detailed case
study of Italy and Germany shows that convergence over time reduces the
benefits to be had from a European system of insurance, so that for 1979 to
1994, national budgets provide nearly 70 per cent of the insurance provided
by an EU system (as compared with 40 per cent for 1961 to 1979).
This suggests that, even allowing for the distinction between intertemporal and interregional transfers, the benefits to be gained by adding a
supra-national stabilizing element to the existing fiscal functions would not
be that great. The work of Fatás, even with data ending in 1994, finds that the
gains to be had by introducing this additional component ‘is modest’ (p. 192).
112 Robert Ackrill
The debate on EMU has emphasized so much the need for the extensive reassignment of fiscal functions to the EU. This work has the dramatic conclusion that with the greater convergence achieved through greater monetary
policy co-ordination, the need for a supra-national stabilizing function
actually falls. For this to work, however, national fiscal flexibility must be
retained. This is the theme of the following section.
As a footnote to this analysis, it is interesting to note that Bayoumi and
Masson state (page 267) that ‘stabilization of cyclical movements in income
across EC states can be carried out at the national level.’ They also observe (p.
269), that the institutional structure of a country is important in determining
the size of federal fiscal flows, to the point that ‘neither the United States nor
Canada provides a “blueprint” for the EC’. As noted below, however, although
EMU does not have a single fiscal policy to accompany the single monetary
policy, it does have a mechanism for co-ordinating national fiscal policies.
This conforms with one of the observations of Allsopp, Davies and Vines
(1995: 141), who argue that whilst ‘the design of fiscal policy would need to
be co-ordinated . . . it could be locally implemented.’ A further point of
interest comes from Bayoumi and Masson. They argue that low labour
mobility enhances the effectiveness of national stabilization policies and that,
moreover, inter-country labour mobility is currently sufficiently low to ensure
that such policies are effective. Furthermore, there is a growing body of
evidence that suggests regions across borders in the European Union are
becoming more similar, whereas regions within borders are becoming less
similar (see Fontagné and Freudenberg, 1999: 268–9, for a review. See also,
inter alia, Fatás, 1998; Forni and Reichlin, 2001). Whilst this serves to limit
the extent of cross-border stabilization needed because of EMU, it might
require greater national action in future (again, see below).
Stabilization and the Stability and Growth Pact
One unusual feature of EMU is that monetary policy is assigned to the supranational ECB, whereas most fiscal policies are still assigned to national
governments. Much of the foregoing discussion has indicated that, of itself,
this is not necessarily a problem. What many argue, however, is that some
kind of control is still needed in order to ensure national fiscal policies are
compatible with the anti-inflationary stance of the ECB – that is, that the
anti-inflation credibility of this fledgling institution is supported rather than
compromized by national fiscal policies (see, inter alia, Artis and Winckler,
1998, 1999; Buti et al., 1998). It is on this basis that the Stability and Growth
Pact is justified. This allows countries to retain control over national fiscal
policy instruments, subject to a limit on the overall deficit (other than in a
deep recession or in the event of a natural disaster). Member states must ensure
their average budget is about in balance over the medium term to ensure that
in times of economic downturn the deficit does not rise above 3 per cent
(though see Artis and Buti, 2000 for a more detailed analysis).
Stabilization in EMU 113
Although this limit restricts discretionary fiscal policy, of particular
concern is whether or not the functioning of automatic stabilizers will also be
restricted (see, inter alia, Artis and Winckler, 1999; Eichengreen, 1997; Buti
et al., 1997). If the deficit is too large, or the depth of recession not great
enough to exempt the country from the financial penalty, the fiscal policy
response from the country in question might need to be pro-cyclical in order
to avoid a financial penalty.9 The Stability and Growth Pact might therefore
generate instability if a government is forced to undertake such discretionary
fiscal action, neutralizing the benefits from the operation of non-discretionary
automatic stabilizers.10
The idea of a budget in balance over the medium term is not merely a
convenient benchmark. Masson (1996) and Thygesen (1999) are but two
authors who present evidence suggesting that, other than in extreme
conditions (when the exemption may well not apply anyway), this general rule
of budgetary balance leaves sufficient leeway for automatic stabilizers to
function normally and without restraint. As Thygesen observes, this would
allow for a ‘substantial role for national budgetary policies in macroeconomic
stabilization’ (p. 29). An alternative approach to ensuring flexibility under the
Stability and Growth Pact is to remove certain elements of expenditure from
the constraint. One possibility is to exclude public investment (see
Eichengreen, 1997). This policy, as pursued by the United Kingdom, has
received criticism not only from the Commission, but also from the International Monetary Fund, who argue that it risks failing to control spending
adequately. Another suggestion from Eichengreen (1997: 95) is to adjust the
excessive deficit procedure so it applies to ‘the constant-employment budget
deficit’. Overall, however, there seems plenty of evidence to support the claim
that, so long as average budgets are roughly in balance, the concerns over the
Stability and Growth Pact inhibiting automatic stabilisers will not be
realized. On the other hand, for as long as the budget limit applies to the
overall balance and that balance is in deficit, public investment might be
squeezed. The need for countries to continue to pursue sound fiscal policies
once in EMU remains.11 Indeed, Eurostat data indicate that, in 2000, the total
euro area budget was marginally in surplus. Even so, five countries still had
deficits, although in all cases the figures were better than in the preceding
three years.
Conclusion
The existing literature on fiscal federalism has developed in the context of
studying national economies and the fiscal relationships between national and
sub-national levels of government. In the context of the European Union and
supranational fiscal authority, however, this traditional paradigm is not only
inadequate but confused, leading to a lack of clarity in the debate on fiscal
federalism in EMU. In identifying clearly subnational, national and supranational levels of fiscal authority, this chapter has allowed for distinctions and
114 Robert Ackrill
similarities to be drawn between each. This has proved important in highlighting flaws in the assumption that EMU will see the Union supersede
national governments as the ‘highest’ fiscal authority. Fiscal federalism needs
to be able to incorporate supra-national authority effectively. It is argued that
subsidiarity allows this to be done in a clear manner for the European Union
and, moreover, that the conclusion that stabilization does not yet need to be
re-assigned to the European level is consistent with the principles of fiscal
federalism. It is also argued that fiscal federalism needs to be clearer in
studying not just which fiscal functions are to be allocated between different
levels of government, but also which fiscal instruments are involved since
these are, ultimately, the tools that will be re-assigned should the European
Union ever be given a stabilization role.
Such stabilization as will occur in EMU will predominantly be through
national automatic stabilization instruments. Evidence indicates that current
stabilization efforts through national budgets compare favourably with the
stabilization achieved by the federal budgets of the United States and Canada,
both clearly sustainable currency areas. Moreover, there is considerable weight
of argument that suggests membership of EMU will enhance economic
convergence. This will mean less of a burden being placed on national fiscal
policies for autonomous stabilization in EMU than previously as shocks
become more symmetric. The distinction between stabilization and insurance
reinforces this conclusion, with studies suggesting that national budgets can
provide stabilization, whilst the benefits to be gained by the European Union
from introducing a supra-national insurance system are currently small. Put
another way, the lack of EU insurance does not threaten EMU. There is also
concern that the design of the Stability Pact will impair the freedom of
national automatic stabilisers to operate. The evidence, however, points to
this threat only becoming a reality if countries fail to continue the current
trend of improving fiscal balances and, moreover, if they sustain large deficits
over a substantial period of time. It has not been the intention of this chapter
to argue that supra-national stabilization will never be needed but, rather, to
present a series of arguments that suggest, when combined with considerations both of fiscal federalism and subsidiarity, that such re-assignment is
not yet needed.
Notes
1 Throughout this chapter, subsidiarity is given an economic context by considering
‘effective’ in terms of economic objectives and outcomes.
2 Thygesen (1999: 22).
3 They note elsewhere (Alesina and Perotti, 1995) that a balanced budget rule would
be optimal if government spending were constant throughout the budget
planning horizon.
4 Currently 80–90 per cent of EU spending is on redistribution (predominantly
under the agricultural and regional policies), with a small amount on allocation
(principally an evolving research policy).
Stabilization in EMU 115
5 See, inter alia, Gros and Thygesen (1998: 285–7) for discussion of the European
Union. The US figure is from the Financial Times, 29 January 2001, as is that for
intra-EU mobility.
6 Note that this distinction would be less important if region-specific shocks were
the more common. Bini-Smaghi and Vori (1993) and Lee and Shields (1997)
suggest that in the European Union, industry-specific shocks are more prevalent.
7 See de Grauwe (2000: chapters 2 and 4) for more details.
8 See Gros and Thygesen (1998: 286–7).
9 Andersen and Dogonowski (1999) examine much historical evidence for rising
budget deficits and find that a number exceeds 3 per cent. They fail, however, to
indicate whether these were matched by sufficiently large falls in GDP to render
the Stability Pact penalty inoperative.
10 Another aspect of the Stability and Growth Pact is that a budget actually has to
exceed 3 per cent for nearly a year before a deposit is required and many more
months before the deposit is turned into a fine. Thus the deficit has to be both
particularly large and long-lasting for the penalty system to come into force.
11 Arguably the need for fiscal flexibility is even greater in EMU with the final
sacrifice of autonomous monetary policy (see Masson (1996) for a summary of
the main issues), although it is possible that continued action to liberalize
labour markets in member states can also help to compensate for the loss of local
monetary policy flexibility. It is beyond the scope of this chapter to pursue this
issue further.
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6
Fiscal and monetary policies
Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
Introduction
Fiscal federalism has been an important economic topic for many years now.
The usual analysis of fiscal federalism has considered various expenditures and
taxes, asking which expenditure and tax programmes should be carried out by
what level of government. However, the more fundamental question
regarding the shape of the nation, or federation, is typically not asked.
European economic integration raises this interesting and fundamental
question. Depending on whether one is looking at the European Union (EU)
or the euro area, either fifteen or twelve viable economic states have come
together and formed a new union, certainly the most significant such union in
modern economic history. Instead of dealing with the assignment of spending
and taxing programmes between various levels of government, the Europeans
are now considering situations where national governments are giving up
some authority to the newly-formed overall confederation. Analysing such an
important change greatly enriches the study of federalism. Now questions
involving the power that is given up, how it is managed at the new central
level, and what other accommodations are to be made, are all in play.
In this chapter we examine European economic integration in light of
standard thinking about federalism. We first describe the main features of
European integration, analysing how these institutions fit the main prescriptions of a federal system. On some issues the Europeans have already developed
reasonably satisfactory arrangements, on others they have a way to go, and on
still others their unique historical path may suggest some interesting new
departures in the federalism literature. We then try to extract some lessons
from this analysis: some recommendations for Europe based on the orthodox
principles of fiscal federalism, and some modifications of these orthodox
principles based on the European experience.
Institutional description
In contrast to the mature federations contemplated in the standard theory of
fiscal federalism, the European Union is not a federation but a confederation of
fifteen national governments. The EU central government is small and derives
120 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
most of its authority indirectly through the national governments rather than
through direct elections. The directly elected European Parliament has a very
limited role in governing the Union. The principal power of the Union’s
government rests with the Council of the European Union (the Council), which
is not directly elected but consists of one representative at the ministerial level
from each member government. The European Commission (the Commission)
is the executive organ of the Union, advising the Council and implementing
its directives.
Given this structure, the European Union features a relatively restricted
role for the central authority. Among policies that are determined centrally,
monetary policy is probably the most important. That is set by the European
System of Central Banks. Only twelve of the fifteen Union member states are
part of the euro common currency area. The eventual goal is to include all
fifteen Union member states in the euro area, as well as to include new EU
members as soon as practical after their accession. Denmark’s rejection of the
euro, for example, may call into question this timeframe.
The Maastricht Treaty set conditions for the adoption of the common
currency by member countries. Inflation rates and long-term interest rates
were required to converge toward the average rates in the three best-performing member countries. National governments were also required to bring
budget deficits and debt down to acceptable levels, or to show that they were
making significant progress toward achieving those goals. The fiscal requirements stemmed from a concern that, under monetary union, the fiscal policy
of one country would have an impact on other countries. First, there was a fear
that large budget deficits and debts in one country would drive up interest
rates for other countries within the monetary union. Second, large fiscal
deficits for the area as a whole could undermine the credibility of the new
Central Bank, to the extent that monetary policy might be needed to accommodate overly loose fiscal policy. Finally, there was a concern that market
participants might assume that the European Union would bail out a country
in severe financial difficulties.
The Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) was adopted in 1997 to ensure that
fiscal discipline would be a continuing part of Economic and Monetary Union
(EMU). Under the SGP, each country in the euro area must submit a stability
programme, while each country in the broader EU must submit a convergence
programme. These programmes give targets over the medium term (typically
the next four years) for the budget balance and debt. The Commission reviews
each programme and makes a recommendation to the Council, which then
delivers an opinion on each programme and can ask a member country to alter
its targets.
The Council and the Commission monitor the implementation of the
stability programmes to ensure that member country governments do not
diverge significantly from the stated targets. Because the budget balance
targets are not set in cyclically-adjusted (or structural) terms, a significant
worsening of economic performance and tax revenues relative to that assumed
Fiscal and monetary policies
121
in the programme can force a national government to tighten its fiscal stance
in order to meet the programme objectives. Partly in response to that
possibility, the economic assumptions embedded in the stability programmes
tend to be on the conservative side. That presents a problem of a different sort.
If economic performance is stronger than assumed, a national government can
ease its fiscal stance and still meet its stated objectives. In both scenarios, the
focus on budget balance targets can create incentives for pro-cyclical fiscal
policy.
Spending policies
The theory of fiscal federalism concludes that, in the absence of significant
externalities or economies of scale, spending programmes should be carried out
at the lowest level of government possible. In this way spending programmes
can respond to local concerns and conditions and take account of regional taste
differences. But because factors of production are typically mobile across state
borders, taxation programmes should be conducted at the highest level of
government possible, to cut down on tax competition between local authorities that could lead to sub-optimal levels of service provision. The difference between high local expenditures and low local taxes, and low central
expenditures and high central taxes, is to be made up by central government
grants to local governments.
Largely for historical reasons, the European Union appears to fit this
prescription on the spending side, though not on the tax or grant side. The EU
budget is very small relative to that of central government budgets in the
fifteen member states and in other Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) countries. EU central government outlays were
restricted by agreement to only 1.27 per cent of EU GDP for the 2000–06
period, and the Union also has very little discretion over this spending.
The largest single central spending programme is in connection with the
Common Agricultural Policy, a programme designed to stabilize and support
farm incomes. Another type of EU spending is aimed at facilitating the growth
of a single market and helping poorer regions that are left behind. To that end,
there are several funds that are collectively called the Structural and Cohesion
Funds. These funds are used to develop infrastructure and promote adjustment in regions that are lagging in development or that are facing structural
difficulties. These funds are not primarily geared towards redistribution as
such, and their small size prevents them from doing much to address economic
inequalities, within or across countries. These funds also do not play any role
in stabilizing against asymmetric spending shocks, a topic we discuss below.
The European Union does not have spending programmes in many of the
areas that would normally be contemplated for the central government in
longer-standing federations. The Union does not provide for such standard
central services as national defence, foreign aid, or inter-country highways.
There has been some move to give the Union a greater role in co-ordinating
122 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
defence and foreign policy, including a suggestion by the French foreign
minister that Europe may someday need a single nuclear authority to speak for
the Union as a whole in negotiations with other nuclear powers. This is one
straw in the wind that suggests that the central government’s role in providing standard national goods may gradually increase over time.
In addition, the European Union might develop a larger role over time in
the redistribution of income among EU countries. But rather than giving the
EU government a greater share of revenues, or permitting it to levy its own
taxes, the Union may devise a revenue sharing system with its member
national governments, similar to that now used within Germany.
If the European Union begins to provide more services that are currently
funded by national governments, and if it acquires the revenue sources to
provide these services, the importance of the present national governments
may recede over time. Under orthodox canons of fiscal federalism, services
such as primary education, police and fire protection, and local roads, now
provided by local governments, should probably stay that way. Services such
as national defence and inter-country highways should probably gravitate to
the centralized level. This may leave a vacuum at the present national level. It
has long been predicted, so far not accurately, that the same vacuum would
develop for American states.
One additional area where the European Union, even though new, does
follow orthodox canons of federalism involves policies related to competition.
To nurture an evolving single market, the Commission sets competition
policy. The goal of that policy is to guarantee that firms can compete on a level
playing field throughout the Union. Competition policy also strives to avoid
monopolization of markets. Firms are prohibited from making agreements
that restrict competition or from abusing a dominant position in a market.
The Commission rules on proposed mergers to ensure that they do not impede
competition and to decide whether they are compatible with the Single
Market. The Commission also aims to prevent member countries from aiding
firms in a way that would distort competition.
Taxation and grants
While the theory of federalism suggests that much taxation authority should
be lodged with the central government, the historical development of the
European Union did not follow that pattern. Member national states were
reluctant to surrender too much taxing power to the new confederation. To
reduce tax competition, then, the European Union has taken the alternative
approach of trying to harmonize or to co-ordinate different national taxation
systems. The logic is that as far as tax competition goes, the important issue is
relative tax rates, not which government actually collects the revenue.
In the European Union model, there is in principle limited tax competition
and little need for central government grants. Those who fear the rise of
government would see at least two advantages in the European model:
Fiscal and monetary policies
●
●
123
rather than spending most of their time lobbying for grants, member
country politicians should actually be managing their budgets;
to the extent that union power or other forces tend to raise government
spending beyond the optimal level, any residual tax competition that
follows incomplete standardization will offset the pro-spending distortions.
As for particular taxes, the theory of fiscal federalism provides some guidance
about which taxes should be harmonized and which not. Theory suggests that
taxes on mobile factors should be harmonized, while taxes on immobile factors
need not be. That implies that taxes on mobile capital, including corporate
taxes, should be harmonized but that taxes on labour need not be, at least to
the same degree. The Value Added Tax (VAT) would fall into the category of
taxes on mobile factors, because purchasers can move across the border to
make some purchases.
Table 6.1 shows, for each of the EU countries, effective tax rates on labour,
capital and consumption, as well as standard VAT rates. These effective tax
rates (from the European Commission) allow us to separate the incidence of
the tax burden falling on each factor. Effective tax rates come from dividing
the broad categories of tax revenues by the corresponding tax bases: labour
income, capital income, and consumption expenditure. As can be seen from
the table, consistent with the idea that less mobile factors would be more
heavily taxed in the absence of complete tax co-ordination, the average tax
rate on labour income is greater than that on capital or on consumption. In
Table 6.1 Tax rates in EU countries
Austria
Belgium
Finland
France
Germany
Ireland
Italy
Luxembourg
The Netherlands
Portugal
Spain
Denmark
Greece
United Kingdom
Sweden
Average
Standard Deviation
Coefficient of variation
Effective tax
rate on labour
Effective tax
rate on capital
Effective tax rate
on consumption
Standard
VAT rate
40.6
44.8
43.3
42.4
44.0
24.2
35.8
31.0
36.9
27.8
29.9
44.5
29.3
25.2
51.3
36.7
8.1
22.1%
18.8
23.7
24.1
22.6
15.9
20.8
26.2
34.0
25.1
24.6
18.5
28.0
19.5
35.1
27.9
24.3
5.3
21.6%
23.4
20.5
24.5
24.5
17.9
24.8
22.9
25.7
19.5
22.7
17.7
30.5
20.0
18.2
28.0
22.7
3.7
16.1%
20.0
21.0
22.0
19.6
16.0
21.0
20.0
15.0
17.5
17.0
16.0
25.0
18.0
17.5
25.0
19.4
3.0
15.4%
Source: European Commission, May 2000.
124 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
addition, the standard deviation of effective labour tax rates among EU
countries is greater than that for capital tax rates, although the difference is
only slight when measured by the coefficient of variation.
As shown by both the standard deviation and the coefficient of variation,
consumption tax rates (and specifically VAT rates) appear more closely aligned
among EU countries than are tax rates on labour and capital. Consumption is
intermediate between labour and capital in terms of mobility. While crossborder shopping can occur in response to significant differences in tax rates, it
does not occur to the same extent as cross-border movements of capital. Thus
the smaller variation in consumption tax rates than capital tax rates across EU
countries may owe less to the mobility of consumption than to efforts by the
Commission to co-ordinate tax policies with respect to consumption. The
Commission has proposed minimum standard rates for the VAT and has
encouraged a reduction in the number of items that are taxed at reduced
VAT rates.
Capital is mobile enough for tax competition and tax evasion to be serious
worries, leading to a presumptive role for the Union in harmonizing capital
income tax rates and tax withholding policies. There is a concern that
investment will flow to countries with low tax rates, or that taxpayers may
escape taxation altogether by investing in a country that does not report the
income to the country in which the taxpayer resides. The best solution to this
problem is to have full centralization of taxes on mobile factors. The next best
is to have full information-sharing among EU countries. The third best is
withholding at the source of investment income to reduce the incentive to
evade taxes.
There is less labour mobility in Europe than in other countries with a
federal structure – the United States, Canada, and Australia. Low labour
mobility allows European governments to set labour income taxes and
unemployment benefits more freely than would otherwise be the case. But
labour mobility, at least among the EU countries, will probably increase over
time, making a centralized set of tax rates on labour income potentially more
desirable in the future.
The greater mobility of capital than labour has tended to shift EU taxation
away from capital and towards labour, as would be predicted by most
economic theories. As long as capital is fully mobile, within the European
Union and indeed outside of its borders, its income cannot be taxed very
heavily by any country. Hence this tax shift is fundamentally a result of factor
mobility, not of European economic integration or harmonization policies. It
would be likely in any federation.
Fiscal policy
Most discussions of fiscal federalism consider spending and tax programmes
and end there. The usual thinking is that stabilization policies, monetary and
fiscal policy, are best left to the central authority. But that thinking ignores
Fiscal and monetary policies
125
the fact that macroeconomic shocks could be regional, affecting some parts of
the federation differently than other parts. If the federation has a common
monetary policy, the logical way to deal with differential shocks is through
differential fiscal policy.
This is precisely the issue that now confronts the European Union. There
are clearly differential shocks. These may be less important over time in the
EU countries, as they integrate and perhaps become similar economies. But
the EU countries will never be producing exactly the same goods, and indeed
integration may also increase specialization. For practical purposes, there
should at least be planning for a fiscal response to differential shocks.
The following chart provides an illustration of how stabilization needs may
vary across member countries at any given point in time. The chart shows, for
ten of the euro zone countries, short-term interest rates implied by a simple
Taylor rule that puts equal weights on output gaps (measured by the OECD)
and the excess of core inflation over the implicit target rate, which we have
assumed to be 1½ per cent. The equilibrium real interest rate is assumed to be
3¼ per cent, which is approximately equal to the twenty-year average for
Germany. It is notable that considerable convergence among implied Taylorrule interest rates has taken place among EMU countries since the Maastricht
18
Taylor Rule for:
EU-11
Germany
Ireland
Netherlands
Italy
Austria
Belgium
Finland
France
Portugal
Spain
16
14
Percent
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
*Based on simple Taylor Rule with weight of 1/2 each on the output gap and the excess of inflation over 1.5 percent.
Figure 6.1 Taylor Rule short-term interest rates.
126 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
treaty was signed. However, the chart shows a significant difference even in
the most recent year between the Taylor-rule interest rates of the countries
most (Ireland) and least (Germany) in need of restraint.
In principle one can think of several potential natural adjustment mechanisms for differential shocks. Relative prices can change, factors of production
can migrate, there can be monetary transfers between regions, or fiscal policies
can be different. In the European Union, most of the natural adjustment
mechanisms seem to be unimportant: relative prices are sluggish, labour
mobility is limited, and regional transfers are minimal. This leaves differential fiscal policy as the main means of adjusting for differential shocks.
The small size of the EU Budget implies, at least for now, that differential
EU fiscal policy will not play a large role in fiscal stabilization. Since national
governments will control their much larger budgets, they could in principle
act differentially. Those countries with excess demand pressure could tighten
fiscal policy and those countries with deficient demand could ease. There is no
constitutional bar to such an assumption of stabilizing fiscal policy responsibilities by the component national governments. Unlike state governments in
the United States, these national governments do not have constitutional
constraints on their ability to borrow, and indeed have been borrowing on
world capital markets for years.
But there are nevertheless some barriers to having the component states
conduct differential fiscal policy. As said above, the small size of the EU
Budget implies there can be no EU-wide tax-transfer system for risk-sharing.
There is no automatic response to shocks that hit some parts of the European
Union more than others, and no centralized income tax that will automatically absorb less from countries that are in recession and more from
countries that are booming. Nor is there a centralized unemployment
insurance scheme that could provide differential help to those countries with
relatively high unemployment.
Given the resistance of the EU countries toward an EU-wide income tax,
Goodhart and Smith (1993) have put forward a proposal for an insurance
mechanism that would allow for stabilization against temporary differential
shocks. Their proposal would involve temporary additional fiscal contributions
from countries that are experiencing booms and additional disbursements to
countries in recession, with little long-term redistribution of income between
countries. In contrast to a central income tax, such a system would not protect
against permanent shocks, and there would seem to be serious definitional
problems regarding whether a country is in recession (hence qualifying for
outside assistance) or in a boom (having an obligation to give outside assistance).
The Maastricht Treaty is an even more serious bar. To protect fiscal
integrity, Maastricht required the member states of the European Union to
reduce deficits to 3 per cent of GDP and public debt ratios to 60 per cent of
GDP. At the time, few of the states were close to these targets, and all have
taken significant restrictive actions to come into compliance. Moreover, the
Commission critiques the medium-term plans for fiscal deficits under the
Fiscal and monetary policies
127
Stability and Growth Pact. Until now, the emphasis has been definitely on
bringing states into compliance with these targets.
Provisions in the Stability and Growth Pact allow a country to have a
temporary deficit above the 3 per cent ceiling without sanction if the country’s
GDP declines by at least 2 per cent in the relevant year. In addition, the
Council is allowed to grant an exception if a country’s GDP declines by from
0.75 to 2 per cent in the relevant year. Even so, the joint supervision of fiscal
policies based on actual budget balances tends to create incentives for national
governments to tighten fiscal policy when a slowdown reduces revenues.
Given this past emphasis, there seems to be no problem with countercyclical fiscal policy in response to booming demand. Countries could simply
tighten their fiscal policy and move further away from their Maastricht limits,
with the Commission unlikely to object. The serious problem is on the other
side: What happens if a country sees a recession coming and tries to ease fiscal
policy differentially?
It could accomplish such expansionary fiscal policy in at least three ways.
One, not satisfactory to anybody, is for the recession to be so serious that the
escape clauses are invoked. Second, the country could apply for a waiver to
deviate from the targets it has set. A third, by far the most preferred in the
long run, is for the country to reduce deficits and debt to levels well below the
Maastricht limits, and then develop some ‘cap room’. The country could
simply incorporate its fiscal plans into its medium-term report, and follow
through.
As shown in the Table 6.2, a few of the EMU countries have projected
budget surpluses and thus room for fiscal flexibility, while others expect to
open up some ‘cap room’ over the next few years. For both Belgium and Italy,
government debt relative to GDP is expected to remain well above the 60 per
cent Maastricht upper limit through 2003. However, both countries have
reduced their debts significantly over the past few years and expect to make
further progress in the medium term, so they are not considered to be in
violation of that criterion.
The projections in the 2000 stability programmes show that the EU
member countries anticipate a gradual reduction in their fiscal deficits and
debts relative to GDP over the next few years, although only about half expect
to be in surplus by 2003. According to the Commission, however, most of the
projected improvement will come from anticipated strong growth and
reductions in interest payments, with no significant progress in the cyclicallyadjusted primary balance.
The fact that the European Union has emphasized conformity in fiscal
policy, along with the fact that the deficit targets are set in terms of actual
deficits and that countries have developed only limited cap room, could do
more than prevent fiscal stabilization. It could actually encourage pro-cyclical
fiscal policies. Suppose a country is near the Maastricht deficit limit when
growth slows. The slowdown will tend to lower tax revenues, raise deficits,
and force spending cutbacks, hence aggravating the slowdown. If the growth
128 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
Table 6.2 Projections in the 2000 stability programmes (% of GDP)
General government surplus
(Maastricht Limit = – 3%)
Austria
Belgium
Finland
France
Germany
Ireland
Italy
Luxembourg
The Netherlands
Portugal
Spain
Debt
(Maastricht Limit = 60%)
2000
2001
2002
2003
2000
2001
2002
2003
–1.7
–1.0
4.7
–1.7
–1.0
1.2
–1.5
2.5
–0.6
–1.5
–0.8
–1.5
–0.5
4.2
–1.3
–1.5
2.5
–1.0
2.6
–1.3
–1.1
–0.4
–1.4
0.0
4.6
–0.9
–1.0
2.6
–0.6
2.9
–1.1
–0.7
0.1
–
0.2
4.7
–0.3
–0.5
–
–0.1
3.1
–
–0.3
0.2
62.2
112.4
42.9
59.4
61.0
46.0
111.7
4.3
62.3
57.1
62.8
61.2
108.8
40.7
59.0
60.5
40.0
108.5
4.3
61.8
55.2
60.6
60.0
105.0
38.0
58.1
59.5
36.0
104.3
4.3
61.0
53.3
58.1
–
101.3
35.2
57.2
58.5
–
100.0
4.3
–
51.0
55.8
Source: ECB Monthly Bulletin, March 2000.
slowdown is not shared across the euro zone, this problem is compounded by
the fact that interest rates are set centrally, hence eliminating any automatic
monetary stabilizers.
How serious is this problem? If policy were pro-cyclical, as actual output
falls relative to potential (making the output gap more negative), fiscal policy
would be getting more contractionary (raising the structural budget surplus).
Hence there would be a negative correlation between changes in output gaps
and changes in structural budget surpluses. Table 6.3 shows data for ten
countries in the euro zone, pre- and post-Maastricht. It also shows comparable
data for five other countries, and with the correlations done for both actual and
structural budget surpluses. The table suggests several points:
For almost all countries there is a vast difference between the actual and
structural correlations, indicating that automatic fiscal stabilizers are alive
and well, pre-and post-Maastricht, inside and outside of the EMU area.
●
For all euro area countries the correlation between output gaps and actual
budget surpluses is positive in the post-Maastricht era, indicating that
the automatic fiscal stabilizers do still work for most of these countries.
Indeed, for all countries except Finland the correlations have become
more positive since Maastricht, indicating that, for whatever reason,
automatic fiscal stabilizers seem to work better than before in these
countries. Note that the same is not true for the comparison countries at
the bottom of the table.
●·
For all euro zone countries except for Finland and Austria, the structural
correlations in the post-Maastricht period have become less negative,
●
Fiscal and monetary policies
129
Table 6.3 Correlations between changes in output gaps and changes in fiscal surpluses
Actual surpluses
Germany
France
Italy
The Netherlands
Spain
Portugal
Belgium
Ireland
Austria
Finland
United States
Canada
Japan
United Kingdom
Sweden
Structural surpluses
Pre-Maastricht
(1983–92)
Post-Maastricht
(1993–99)
Pre-Maastricht
(1983–92)
Post-Maastricht
(1993–99)
–0.85
0.76
–0.05
0.14
0.69
–0.13
0.23
0.04
–0.20
0.62
0.65
0.84
0.17
0.58
0.79
0.55
0.88
0.29
0.15
0.89
0.41
0.70
0.49
0.15
0.42
0.20
0.52
0.31
–0.22
0.33
–0.86
0.16
–0.42
–0.39
0.26
–0.31
–0.25
–0.33
–0.10
0.59
0.60
0.18
–0.14
0.62
0.29
0.03
0.55
0.00
–0.17
0.92
0.26
0.20
0.10
–0.21
–0.16
–0.03
0.19
0.06
–0.23
0.13
Source: OECD, June 2000.
●
indicating again that, for whatever reason, Maastricht seems to be generating discretionary fiscal policies that are less pro-cyclical than before.
But even if Maastricht itself is absolved from blame, the fact remains that
in all euro zone countries except for France and Spain, and in all comparison countries, the structural correlations are now either negative or
close to zero, so there is not much discretionary counter-cyclical fiscal
policy anywhere.
Even though country data do not suggest a serious pro-cyclical problem at this
point, there is a rather simple way around the potential problem. Eichengreen
has suggested that the deficit limits be applied to structural, and not actual,
deficit levels. This simple change would eliminate the destabilizing bias
toward pro-cyclical fiscal policies. One drawback to Eichengreen’s suggestion
is the difficulty of estimating potential output, which would be necessary to
calculate structural budget balances. If national governments were charged
with estimating their own potential output, there could be concerns that they
would overstate potential output to make budget deficits look more cyclical
than structural. On the other hand, if a central body were to estimate potential
output, there would be criticism that national governments would be forced
to alter fiscal policy in response to the calculations of anonymous bureaucrats.
In fact, the OECD, IMF, and national governments frequently come up with
divergent estimates of structural budget balances.
130 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
Monetary policy
Since the EMU is in effect creating a joint central bank from the central banks
of eleven previously independent countries, it makes sense to look at how this
has been accomplished. As described in some detail by Bertaut and Iyigun
(1999), monetary policy in the euro area is conducted by the Eurosystem. This
Eurosystem comprises the European Central Bank (ECB) at its centre, along
with the eleven national central banks. The Maastricht Treaty confers upon
the Eurosystem as a whole most normal responsibilities of a central bank:
defining and implementing monetary policy in the euro area, conducting foreign
exchange operations, holding and managing official reserves, promoting the
smooth operation of payment systems, and issuing banknotes and coins. In
addition, the Eurosystem is expected to contribute to policies relating to the
prudential supervision and stability of the financial system and to collect
relevant statistical information.
The Eurosystem is structured much like the US Federal Reserve System.
The ECB has the responsibility to make sure that all of these central banking
tasks are carried out, either on its own or by the national central banks.
Decisions regarding monetary policy, interest rates and monetary growth, are
set by the Governing Council (GC) of the ECB, composed of the eleven
national central bank governors as well as six members of the executive committee. The primary responsibility of this executive board is to implement
monetary policy and issue instructions to the national central banks, in
accordance with the guidelines of the GC.
The euro area has adopted a form of inflation targeting to guide the conduct
of monetary policy. As specified in the Maastricht Treaty, the primary
objective of the ECB is to ‘maintain price stability’, defined as a change of 2
per cent or less in the published harmonized consumer price index. To bring
this about, the GC considers the growth in euro area monetary aggregates,
along with a mix of other indicators that give a ‘broadly based assessment of
the outlook for future price developments’. This mix includes wages, bond
rates, the yield curve, measures of real activity, business and consumer confidence, and euro exchange rates.
The ECB’s focus in setting monetary policy is on area-wide price developments, not on conditions in individual countries. Discussion in the ECB
Monthly Bulletin is in terms of area-wide developments, and the ECB itself
publishes only area-wide statistics. Although ECB officials sometimes comment on conditions in individual countries, such comments are in terms of
how policy is likely to be set for the euro area as a whole, with the tacit
assumption that fiscal policy (or something outside of the common monetary
policy) is left to deal with differential conditions in individual countries.
The Eurosystem has the authority to make decisions about intervention in
the foreign exchange market and to conduct those operations. The ECB can
conduct foreign exchange operations using its own reserves, or it can instruct
the national central banks (who hold the bulk of the foreign exchange reserves)
Fiscal and monetary policies
131
to do so on the Eurosystem’s behalf. However, as stated in the ECB Monthly
Bulletin (October 2000), ‘with regard to the overall framework within which
exchange rate policy is conducted, the Treaty [establishing the European
Community] provides for close interaction between the ECB and the EU
Council’. In particular, the Council can, after consultation with the ECB or
upon recommendation of the ECB, formulate ‘general orientations for
exchange-rate policy’ (according to art. 111 (2) of the Treaty).
The more operational aspects of monetary policy – the execution of open
market operations, administration of standing facilities, and reserve requirements are conducted by the national central banks. Access to the standing
facilities is granted by the national central banks in their own countries.
Credit institutions must also submit bids for refinancing operations to their
own national central banks.
Some administrative arrangements reflect prior differences. For example,
the ECB designates collateral required for its operations in two tiers. Tier one
includes marketable euro-denominated debt instruments that fulfill areawide eligibility specified by the ECB. Tier two consists of additional marketable and non-marketable assets of particular importance to national banking
systems. The establishment of two tiers of eligible collateral reflects eligibility differences across the national central banks. In these and some other
matters the ECB decided that full harmonization of practices before the start
of the monetary union was neither practical nor desirable.
Prudential supervision is also conducted in a decentralized fashion. There is
no uniform standard determining which agency has supervisory responsibilities within the euro area. In Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, and
Spain, the national central bank has exclusive supervisory responsibility. In
Belgium, Finland, and Luxembourg, the central bank has no specific supervisory responsibilities. In Austria, France, and Germany the central bank is
extensively involved in supervision, though the explicit supervisory authority
is either another branch of the government or an autonomous public
institution. Although most prudential regulations are harmonized within the
European Union and supervisory roles remain at the national level, the ECB
has seen the need for more coordination, and to this end established the
Banking Supervision Committee in 1999. The mandate of this committee is
to promote co-operation on issues of common interest to banking supervisors
within the European Union, and to assist in the preparation of ECB opinions
on draft legislation regarding banking supervision and financial stability.
Conclusion
The European Union represents an interesting case study for examining some
of the postulates of fiscal federalism. Rather than dividing up responsibilities
between the central and local governments, the Union was formed by a
number of countries coming together to harmonize monetary and certain
fiscal policies.
132 Edward M. Gramlich and Paul R. Wood
The European Union fits naturally into federalism orthodoxy regarding
spending policies. Because the central authority is formed from national
governments without independent political authority, central spending in the
Union will most likely remain low, as suggested by federalist teachings. On
the tax side, however, rather than having large common taxes to reduce migration incentives, the Union is working gradually to harmonize the taxes
assessed by national governments on mobile factors. Time will tell whether
harmonized national tax rates work as well as centralized taxation in limiting
migration incentives, and other inefficiencies.
The EU has worked successfully to centralize monetary policy and harmonize interest rates. Simultaneously it has tried to enforce badly-needed fiscal
discipline on its member states. Such a strategy should work well as long as
there are not disparate recessionary shocks in some countries. If there are, these
countries could in principle combat the shocks through differentially expansionary fiscal policy, but only up to the limits provided by various EU
agreements. Again, time will tell whether these limits impede stabilizing
fiscal policy.
On the whole, the EU has successfully negotiated a complicated transaction
to harmonized tax and monetary policies. Inevitably, a few issues are left in the
wake, and it will be interesting to see whether these issues become important
as time passes.
Bibliography
Bertaut, Carol C. and Iyigun, Murat F. (1999) ‘The Launch of the Euro’, Federal Reserve
Bulletin, October, 655–6.
Eichengreen, Barry (1996) ‘Saving Europe’s Automatic Stabilizers’, National Institute
Economic Review, 159, 92–8.
Eichengreen, Barry and von Hagen, Jürgen (1996) ‘Fiscal Policy and Monetary Union:
Is There a Trade-off Between Federalism and Budgetary Restrictions?’, Working
Paper 5517, National Bureau of Economic Research.
Eichengreen, Barry and Wyplosz, Charles (1997) ‘The Stability Pact: More than a
Minor Nuisance?’, unpublished manuscript, University of California, Berkeley.
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manuscript.
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Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs.
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417–56.
Hoeller, Peter, Louppe, Marie-Odile and Vergriete, Patrice (1996) ‘Fiscal Relations
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Union’, Working Paper No. 6556, National Bureau of Economic Research.
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Does European Monetary Unification Create a Need for Fiscal Insurance or
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Part IV
A global perspective
7
Australia’s federal experience
Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
Introduction
In 1901, the former colonies of New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
Tasmania, Western Australia and South Australia federated to create the
nation of Australia under the auspices of a new constitution. Within the federation, the colonies became States and a democratic national parliament with
an upper house (the Senate) and a lower house (the House of Representatives)
was created.1 The party that achieves a majority of seats in the lower house
forms the national government, generally referred to as the Commonwealth.
Since then Australia has remained a relatively prosperous democratic federation with two features that distinguish its fiscal arrangements from other
federal countries: highly centralized tax powers and a strong emphasis on
inter-State equity. Centralization of taxes has its origins in decisions made in
the course of framing the Constitution, as well as transfers of taxing powers
made during the Second World War. The cornerstone of the emphasis on
equity is a federal institution known as the Commonwealth Grants Commission. Created in 1933 following a period of instability in the federal union,
the Commission implements the most comprehensive system of inter-State
transfers of any federal country. The goal of these transfers is to achieve equity
across States in the provision of public services.
The next two sections of the chapter are organized around two important
distinguishing features of Australian federalism – centralization and the
emphasis on equity. The conclusion highlights implications of this experience
for the European Union.
Centralization
In common with the European Union, an important economic motive behind
Australian federation was the desire to create a customs union with a uniform
system of external tariffs.2 For this reason, the power to levy tariffs was given
exclusively to the Commonwealth in Section 90 of the Constitution. The right
to levy excise taxes was also ceded to the Commonwealth within the same
Section. Various explanations for this have been offered. One is that the
founders were concerned that States might use excise taxes to interfere with
138 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
the intended effects of federal tariff policy.3 Another is that they were worried
over the potential for excise tax competition between States to distort free
internal trade. There is also evidence of a general fear of the negative effects of
inter-colonial rivalry, its impact on federal stability and the need for the States
to pursue common interests through co-operation.
The effect of the State tariff and excise tax exclusion embodied in Section 90
was to leave the States financially weak. In the now famous words of Alfred
Deakin, one of the key instigators of Australian union, Section 90 left the States
‘financially bound to the Chariot wheels of the central Government’.4 However, though the Commonwealth gained considerable tax powers at federation,
it had few expenditure responsibilities (these were restricted mainly to defence
and foreign affairs). The Commonwealth’s tax revenues far exceeded its spending. States, however, retained responsibility for the major public expenditures.
The mismatch between expenditure and revenue for the two levels of
government is illustrated in Table 7.1. In 1901 the Commonwealth was the
dominant collector of taxes, although this disparity is reversed if revenue from
land sales and business operations is taken into account. The States, on the
other hand, were responsible for more than 90 per cent of expenditures. These
imbalances have changed during the twentieth century. The increasing
importance of the Commonwealth’s taxing powers in the overall financing of
government spending reflects, in part, the increasing share of total taxes raised
by the Commonwealth, rising from 66 to 77 per cent of tax collections. But
also, non-tax elements of State revenues have declined as the pace of land sales
slackened off and privatization has cut the importance of State-owned
business operations. Centralization of expenditure has been even more
pronounced. In 1901 the Commonwealth’s share of expenditure was less than
10 per cent, with the States providing the bulk of public services. By the end
of the century, the share of Commonwealth spending had risen to 53 per cent.
Table 7.1 Changes in revenue and spending powers: Australia (%)
1901–02
Tax revenue1
Total revenue2
Total expenditure3
1998–99
Commonwealth
State
Commonwealth
State
Local
76.2
41.5
9.4
23.8
58.5
90.6
77.1
68.4
52.7
19.4
26.2
47.3
3.5
5.3
Notes
1 For 1901–02, Barnard (1986); for 1998–99, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Taxation Revenue
1998–99 (catalogue no. 5506.0), Table 2.
2 Includes revenue from land sales, net revenues from business operations and taxation, but
excludes intergovernment transfers. For 1901–02, source as for 1; for 1998–99, Australian
Bureau of Statistics, Government Financial Estimates 1999–2000 (catalogue no. 5501.0), Tables 2,
5 and 11.
3 Excludes intergovernment transfers. For 1901–02, Barnard (1986); for 1998–99, Australian
Bureau of Statistics, Government Financial Estimates 1999–2000 (catalogue no. 5501.0), Tables 1
and 10.
Australia’s federal experience 139
Comparing the 1901 figures with those for 1998, two points emerge: the
Commonwealth has greatly increased its share of total tax revenue collected
and it has expanded its share of total public sector expenditure.5 These changes
are due mainly to the further loss of tax powers by the States in the period
between federation and the current era. They are also influenced by the fact
that there was a general expansion of the role of government during the
twentieth century and much of this expansion occurred at the national level
(principally, development of the welfare state and income redistribution).
Taxes
The shift of taxation powers to the Commonwealth since federation has been a
result of two factors. First, in 1942 the Commonwealth took control of the
income tax base as a temporary wartime measure, albeit not without an unsuccessful High Court challenge by the States as to the constitutional validity of
the legislation. Prior to 1942, both the States and the Commonwealth levied
income taxes, with a wide variety of bases and rates. In the previous two decades
there had been some movement towards uniformity of tax arrangements by
the various States, but in 1942 there were still 26 separate Commonwealth
and State income taxes.6 In the longer term, Commonwealth control of the
income tax simplified and unified that part of the tax system; in the short term
a more important motivation was to constrain spending by the States,
releasing resources for military purposes. The latter objective was achieved by
returning to the States a sum less than the State taxes collected immediately
prior to the transfer of tax responsibility. In terms of tax centralization, the
effect of these measures was dramatic – in 1945, 94 per cent of all taxes were
collected by the Commonwealth.7
Temporary tax measures quickly acquire a degree of permanence, and in
1946 this proved to be the case with the transfer of income tax powers. Postwar legislation enacted by the Commonwealth entrenched wartime arrangements. Provided States vacated the income tax field, they received grants from
the Commonwealth, the size of which was indexed for growth in population
and nominal wages. With various changes to the basis on which the grants are
determined, this system has persisted to the present day.
The second major force towards centralization involves the meaning of the
term ‘excise’ used in Section 90 of the Constitution. To an economist, an excise
at the State level is a tax on the quantity or value of particular goods produced
within the State. As noted earlier, such a tax, if levied by a State, has the
potential to discriminate between imported and locally produced goods and
may interfere with the intended effects of federal tariff policy.
Given the lack of clarity in the Constitutional debates and the Constitution
itself about the definition of excise, the High Court was soon asked to interpret its meaning. The first case to be considered8 saw the Court adopt an
economist’s view of an excise. This left the States free, in principle, to impose
other consumption-type taxes, including general sales or value added taxes.
140 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
The early stance by the Court was soon abandoned in favour of a more
expansive view of the meaning of excise, the implication of which is that the
States can only levy a tax on consumption (e.g. a general sales tax) as long as
they levied the tax on consumers directly. However, adoption of such a broad
view of excise meant that the States could not use retailers as tax collection
agents, effectively excluding the States from adopting consumption taxes.
Section 90 cases have seen the adoption of this wide definition of an excise as
any tax on the production, distribution or sale of goods. In other words, an
excise has been interpreted by the High Court more as a general sales tax or
value added tax.
Thus, the excise tax exclusion within Section 90 of the Constitution,
together with the High Court’s broad interpretation of excise, has excluded
the States from the consumption tax base.9 As with the income tax, this is in
contrast to other federations where sub national governments levy consumption taxes. The result is that, as detailed in Table 7.2, the States have been
restricted to a relatively narrow tax base, relying mainly for their own-source
revenues on payroll taxes, land taxes, franchise fees, and a range of other minor
tax instruments.
Spending
While tax powers have been ceded to the Commonwealth the States have
retained responsibility for major areas of spending, including education, health
and the provision of important public infrastructure such as utility services,
roads, rail networks and ports. However, as noted, the major expansion of
public expenditure – a feature of most economies during the twentieth century
– has taken place at the national level, principally in the area of income
redistribution. Thus, as indicated in Table 7.1, the Commonwealth’s share of
expenditure has increased considerably since 1901 while the States’ share has
decreased. Unlike taxes, this is due to the expansion in expenditure at the
national level rather than to any loss of expenditure responsibilities by the States.
Fiscal imbalance
We have argued that in Australia the disparity between revenue means and
expenditure needs at the two levels of government – vertical fiscal imbalance –
has increased substantially as a result of the centralization of tax powers.
Though similar trends can be identified for other major federations, it is
commonly recognized that the level and rate of increase of central dominance
over taxation has been relatively more marked in Australia. This is recognized,
for example, by Shah (1994). He shows, using an index of sub-national
autonomy derived from measures of vertical fiscal imbalance such as those
presented in Table 7.1, that of ten major federations (including the United
States and Germany), Australian States have the second lowest degree of fiscal
autonomy.
Australia’s federal experience 141
Table 7.2 Sources of tax revenue 1998–99 ($Abn)
Commonwealth
State and local
Income
Payroll
Sales, customs and excise
Other
101.9
3.2
31.7
0.5
Total
137.3
Payroll
Gambling and insurance
Motor vehicles
Franchises
Property
Total
8.0
6.2
3.9
9.9
16.7
40.8
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Taxation Revenue 1998–99 (catalogue no. 5506.0), Tables 3
and 4.
Scholarly debate over the economic costs and benefits of vertical fiscal
imbalance and State fiscal dependence has not been particularly intense.
Research results that do exist have been almost entirely against centralization.
Specifically, commentators have argued that centralization reduces accountability and creates fiscal illusion among voters. They also argue that policy
competition between States which, as Breton (1984) has proposed, may curtail
the taxing power of wayward governments acting in their own self-interest, is
diminished by centralization. While this may result in a lower overall level of
taxation than otherwise would have been the case, other writers observe that
the States have been forced to rely on relatively inefficient taxes because of the
central dominance of the major bases. Useful discussions of all of these
arguments can be found in Walsh (1990, 1993, 1996).
Finding Australian scholars who support the status quo is much more difficult – indeed, we know of no well-reasoned defence of Australian centralization.
Politicians and policy-makers claim that centralization of tax powers is
necessary in order to allow the Commonwealth to conduct macroeconomic
policy, income redistribution and pursue the national interest in matters of
joint concern to the States. As noted earlier, pursuit of common interests was a
motivating factor behind federation in 1901 and the Commonwealth
frequently uses this justification for central intervention in its dealings with
the States.
The detractors from centralization have called for a reallocation of tax
powers to the States. These calls were particularly strong during the 1980s
and early 1990s when the States were going through a period of budgetary
stress, but have tapered off in recent years. Two options were proposed. The
first, allowing the States into the consumption tax base, required a Constitutional amendment to delete the words ‘. . . and of excise’ from Section 90.
The second, that the States be given access to the income tax base – in
conjunction with the Commonwealth – was the proposal that seemed to be
taken most seriously, at least among the few scholars taking an interest in
federalism. The economic costs and benefits of each approach are discussed in
Collins (1993). In practice, neither of these proposals received widespread
support at the policy or political level. Federal politicians and bureaucrats
142 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
continue to use national interest and macroeconomic arguments in support of
the status quo.
Specific purpose payments
Petchey and Shapiro (1997b) provide another perspective. They observe that,
because of a High Court decision in 1926, the Commonwealth has unfettered
power to attach conditions to the tax reimbursement transfers that it must
make to the States each year as a result of vertical fiscal imbalance. Successive
Commonwealth administrations have taken advantage of this decision and an
increasing proportion of total Commonwealth transfers to the States since
1926 have been conditional. The conditions include matching requirements
and clauses specifying that the States must adopt policy guidelines set down
by the Commonwealth in order to qualify for funding. Greatest use of these
transfers, known as specific purpose payments, has been made in education
and health. In the year 2000–01, specific purpose payments will account for
69 per cent of all Commonwealth transfers to the States.
Bureaucracies have grown at the Commonwealth and State levels of government charged with the sole task of administering and negotiating agreements
related to specific purpose payments. In recent years both levels of government have expressed support for a reduction in these conditional grants,
without effect. The States in 2000 remain highly dependent on specific
purpose payments, particularly in health and education.
According to the thesis put forward by Petchey and Shapiro, specific
purpose payments have allowed the Commonwealth to have a considerable
influence on State policy-making in areas intended by the spirit of the
Constitution to be State responsibilities. Indirectly, tax centralization and
vertical fiscal imbalance have facilitated the diminution of State autonomy
over their expenditure policies. States have increasingly become spending
agents of the Commonwealth with little discretionary power over taxes or
expenditure policy. The implication is that centralization is even more severe
in Australia than measures of fiscal autonomy, for example, those of Shah, or
simple vertical fiscal imbalance ratios, suggest.
The 2000 tax reforms
Recently, a rare opportunity arose to decentralise tax powers, a chance that was
not taken. During 2000, the Commonwealth introduced a value added tax
known locally as a Goods and Services Tax (GST). In 2000–01, the new tax is
expected to raise about $24 billion.10 There have been compensating cuts in
income and other taxes so that the policy change is approximately revenue
neutral from the Commonwealth’s perspective. The principal motivation for
the changes to tax policy is economic efficiency, with the choice of consumption tax based on the belief that a value added tax is less inefficient than a
simple consumption tax.11
Australia’s federal experience 143
Prior to its introduction, limited debate took place on whether the tax
should be levied independently by the States – an option that would require
amendment of Section 90 of the Constitution. Supporters of a more competitive federation favoured the introduction of a State based sales tax similar to
the one levied by the United States.12 However, for policy-makers and
politicians the constitutional obstacles to this option seemed insurmountable.
In Australia, there is a history of electoral suspicion and rejection of constitutional amendments, and given the practical difficulties with operating a value
added tax at the sub-national level in a federation (see Boadway (1997)), a
State level consumption tax was ruled out.
The outcome of the tax reforms imply that lip service was paid to the notion
of improving the States’ autonomy, but in practice nothing changed. The
Commonwealth levies the GST, with all the revenue returned to the States.
The States also have some indirect say in levying the tax rate (currently a
uniform 10 per cent) and administrative matters. The Commonwealth has
eliminated its existing unconditional grants to the States (though not the
specific purposes payments) by an amount equal to the revenue raised from the
GST.13 Therefore, the reforms still leave the Commonwealth with substantial
control of State expenditure at the margin, at least in the immediate term.
This amounts to a revenue sharing mechanism in which the States share one
hundred per cent of the federal GST base. The arrangements do not give the
States independent tax powers and do not increase State fiscal autonomy.
Rather, the untied grants that States used to receive, and which were determined largely at the discretion of the Commonwealth, have been replaced by a
revenue sharing system.
Of course, one can argue that this gives the States more certainty since they
are less dependent on Commonwealth discretion over the size of untied
transfers and instead have access to a tax that will likely grow in real terms.
However, in another sense they are just as dependent on the Commonwealth
which still has discretionary power over the tax rate, the tax base, and whether
the States continue to receive one hundred per cent of the revenue raised.
The ‘fiscal cartel’ thesis
Explanations of why Australia has become so centralized are few. One of the
more prominent ideas is that the Australian federation is a fiscal cartel in
which States and the Commonwealth collude to minimize tax competition.
The benefit to the Commonwealth and the States is that they exploit the
monopoly power of the central government and raise more revenue than under
a competitive tax regime in which tax powers are decentralized and States
engage in tax competition. The monopoly tax revenues are passed back to the
States through the intergovernmental transfer system. Shapiro and Petchey
(1994), in a theoretical analysis of the economic effects of the excise tax exclusion within Section 90, model Australian federalism in this fashion.
Is this good or bad for citizens? The answer depends on how one views
144 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
government behaviour. If it is believed that governments are benevolent and
pursue the interests of the citizenry, then a fiscal cartel may be desirable. In
this world, it is well known that fiscal competition leads to inefficient outcomes.14 By eliminating the inefficiency, a cartel raises social welfare (tax
harmonization, as distinct from centralized tax collection, can achieve the
same welfare improving outcomes if governments are benevolent). The
presence of scale economies associated with tax collection enhances the welfare
gains from a fiscal cartel (scale economies are not a benefit of harmonization,
however, since tax raizing remains at the state level). In Australia, the
economies of scale argument is frequently used by the Commonwealth to
justify central collection of taxes.
Alternatively, if governments pursue their own interests, including
revenue maximization or furthering the prospects of powerful lobby groups, a
tax cartel is not in citizens’ interests. In this world, fiscal competition helps
protect citizens against the abuse of power by governments. By removing
competition the cartel takes away this protection and makes it easier for
governments to pursue their own interests.
Anecdotal evidence of political and official support for the tax cartel is
readily found. Kelly (1978) notes that the system is one of the ‘sacred cows’ of
Australian politics. The discussion of this issue in Kelly ends with a poem,
supposedly a State tax official’s response to a Commonwealth offer of more tax
powers:15
We thank you for the offer of the cow,
But we can’t milk so we answer now,
We answer with a loud emphatic chorus,
You keep the cow and do the milking for us.
Regretfully, there is no rigorous empirical analysis of whether State governments and the Commonwealth have colluded in a tax cartel arrangement to
maximize tax revenue. But the idea remains a popular one in Australia. It also
appeals to economists who worry about the power of government, public
choice issues and whether governments act in the best interests of citizens or
pursue their own agendas.
Borrowing
At the time of federation, the States and Commonwealth each retained the
right to issue sovereign debt. No rules-based constraints on borrowing, such
as the balanced budget requirements or specified debt ratios that characterize
other federal systems, were contemplated. None have been implemented subsequently. Rather, the twentieth century has seen increasing centralism in terms of
the Commonwealth’s control over global borrowing limits for the federation
as a whole. It is only in recent times that this control has been relaxed, with
increasing reliance placed on market-based monitoring of State indebtedness.
The Commonwealth’s first substantive entry into the market was occasioned
Australia’s federal experience 145
by the need for military spending after 1914. After the war, the early 1920s
was a time of intense competition between State governments in domestic and
international financial markets, and non-co-operative borrowing policy was
thought to create negative externalities. The Premiers’ Conference of 192316
delivered a cooperative mechanism by creating a new institution, the Loan
Council, with the aim of co-ordinating borrowings by the States and the
Commonwealth. The Council did this by securing voluntary agreement on the
timing of loan issues and the equalization of loan conditions and interest rates
to be paid.
At the time the concern was with minimizing borrowing-policy competition between governments, rather than with the magnitude of borrowings and
the prospect that governments might be ‘under’ or ‘over’ borrowing. States
were left to determine how much they borrowed. Further, if agreement was
not reached over timing, interest rates and conditions, States could opt out of
the voluntary compact. The Commonwealth’s role was limited to one of
facilitating co-operation and monitoring the voluntary Council’s operations
based on information reported by the States on their borrowings.
These voluntary arrangements were soon replaced by a permanent Loan
Council as part of the Financial Agreement of 1927, an objective of which was
for the Commonwealth to acquire freehold title to properties transferred to it
at the time of federation, in return for the assumption of Commonwealth
liability for State debt.17 The seeds of Commonwealth domination of the
Council were sewn from the start because, although the States each had one
vote in Council decisions, the Commonwealth had two votes plus a casting
vote. By the 1930s concerns about the need to eliminate competition from
government borrowing policies, the prime purpose for setting up the Loan
Council, gave way to worries over excessive state borrowing and high spending on infrastructure during the Depression. The Commonwealth responded
by exercizing its control over the Loan Council and imposed binding limits on
new state borrowings. From this point onward, the Commonwealth’s
stranglehold on the Loan Council expanded and it was increasingly used as a
credit rationing scheme applied to the States and local governments to achieve
macroeconomic goals.
This system broke down in the 1980s, for a number of reasons. At the time
the Commonwealth had large budget deficits and used the Loan Council to
reduce the state allocations in real terms. States responded by using innovative
financing arrangements, made possible by general deregulation of financial
markets, through both local governments and public enterprises. The proportion of State and local government borrowing under the control of the Loan
Council fell from 95 per cent in 1979–80 to 25 per cent in 1983–84.
The financial market deregulation of the early 1980s also helped foster the
idea that financial markets could become effective monitors and regulators of
sub-national borrowing policies. By this time concerns over inefficiencies arising
from competition between States in financial markets had also evaporated
because of the increasing sophistication and size of domestic markets, and
growing access by the public sector to international financial markets.
146 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
The so-called global approach, introduced in 1985, was an attempt to
continue regulation in the form of a voluntary agreement between the
Commonwealth and the States, monitored by the Commonwealth through
the Commonwealth Treasury. The Commonwealth had no legal sanctions to
enforce compliance as it did under the earlier arrangements but it did use
financial sanctions quite effectively, for a time, after 1985. The role of the
Loan Council as sole borrower on behalf of the States was scrapped. It was
given the new task of setting an overall global borrowing limit for new (gross)
borrowings for the sub-national sector. Given the federal dominance of the
Loan Council this was in reality nominated by the Commonwealth and agreed
to by the States following ‘negotiation’ with the threat of financial sanctions
through general revenue grants being used to ensure compliance.
This period marked a radical shift in the distribution of borrowing policy
powers in the sense that states were now allowed to borrow directly from
financial markets in their own right, and negotiate directly over terms and
conditions. Further, the explicit Commonwealth guarantee had gone. For the
first time since 1927, investors were lending directly to states as sovereign
entities and being exposed to state risk, although there was still an implicit
Commonwealth guarantee. In practice, the Commonwealth’s financial
sanctions have proved impossible to enforce with any precision. Because a
major activity of the States is the provision of public services through institutions with a variety of ownership structures, monitoring State liabilities is
extremely difficult.
A feature of the new arrangements is that while the Loan Council has a less
direct role in sub-national borrowing regulation, and the states have more
independence, moves have been taken to improve monitoring and regulation
of sub-national borrowing by financial markets. Adoption of a common accrual
accounting standard across all national and sub-national jurisdictions is an
important part of this process. However, financial markets alone are still seen
in Australia as inadequate monitors and regulators of the States. Two reasons
are given for this. First, in a federation where the central government
implicitly guarantees state debts there may be a moral hazard problem leading
states to over-borrow. Second, there is a public choice question of whether
governments react efficiently to financial market signals. Both have been
advanced as reasons for continued regulation of sub-national borrowings in
Australia.
There has been no recent analysis of the efficiency of these arrangements.
However, it is of note that in 1999 general government debt, aggregated over
all jurisdictions, was just 15.7 per cent of GDP, which is low by contemporary
OECD standards.18
Constitutional and political constraints
Clearly, the Australian Constitution has not protected State interests from the
encroachment of Commonwealth fiscal dominance. Rather, through its lack of
Australia’s federal experience 147
specificity, and the actions of the High Court, the Constitution has aided the
loss of State autonomy.
The other way that State interests might have been protected is through the
political process itself. In this respect, a two-house Parliamentary system was
established at the federal level in 1901: the House of Representatives and the
Senate. The intended role of the Senate was to protect State interests, and in
particular, the interests of the less populous States. To achieve this, these
States were given more than their per-capita share of Senate representatives
(vote weighting). However, most political commentators recognize that the
Senate has never been an effective ‘States house’ mainly because of the party
system, which has seen voting on party, not State, lines.
The implication is that the institutions and legal processes established at
federation left the way open for Australia to become highly centralized if the
public choice process at the national and State levels decided that this should
happen.
Equity
High centralization and vertical fiscal imbalance imply that the Commonwealth makes comparatively large transfers to the States each year. These
transfers now comprise specific purpose payments (conditional transfers) and
all of the revenue from the GST, which is unconditional.
We have noted that the specific purpose payments have promoted Commonwealth influence in State policy decisions – back door centralization. What we
now suggest is that, through the model used to distribute unconditional
transfers, centralization also facilitates inter State uniformity in the provision
of public services. The emphasis on uniformity, we argue, is a result of an
overriding concern in Australia for egalitarianism and equity. As noted, this
as a key feature that separates Australia’s system of federalism from other
countries.
The distribution of unconditional transfers to the States is determined by a
horizontal fiscal equalization formula developed by the Commonwealth Grants
Commission. The formula, the most comprehensive adopted anywhere in the
world, is complex. A full explanation is unwarranted here but we can give
some basic insights using a simple example. Consider revenue base j. The
formula estimates the average tax rate applied by all States to base j. Suppose
this to be 10 per cent. The formula then calculates the (per capita) value of
tax base j in State i, which we suppose for our example to be $40, and the
(per-capita) value of tax base j averaged across all States, which we suppose
to be $50.
Two calculations then follow. First, the average tax rate for base j is applied
to the average tax base j. In the example, this yields $5. The average tax rate is
then applied to tax base j in State i – in our example this yields $4. The
implication is that if State i were to apply the average tax rate to its own tax
base j, it would raise $4 in revenue, but when the average tax rate is applied to
148 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
the average tax base, the yield is $5. The difference is due to the fact that State
i, in our example, is assumed to have a relatively low valued tax base j (on a
per-capita basis). This might be because it is a relatively poor State.
The formula treats the difference between the two, here an amount of $1, as
a revenue need. State i would be entitled to receive a $1 (per-capita) grant from
the pool of funds available. This means that if the State chooses to make an
average tax effort with respect to base j it will receive $5 in revenue – $4 from
its own efforts and $1 in grant which is derived from the tax base of all other
States included in the formula.
In this respect, the formula is no different from tax base sharing schemes
used around the world, both at the national level, and at the city or regional
level. Essentially, the formula allows each State to share the total tax base of all
States and to raise a given amount of revenue from its own base without having
to tax its citizens more heavily (or lightly) than the average tax rate. Of course,
the total revenue need for State i will be the sum of its needs on each tax base.
This sum could be negative or positive, depending on whether State i is rich or
poor in terms of income and endowments of resources.
What distinguishes the Australian approach is the other component of the
model which assesses expenditure needs. This is calculated by first assessing,
for each expenditure category, the average (across all States) cost of providing
the service. The formula then estimates the extent to which the cost of
providing each service in State i deviates from the average for that service due
to factors such as population size, the geographic dispersion of the population,
economies of scale, ethnic background and age distribution. These factors are
known as ‘cost disabilities’ and can be compensated under the Commission’s
methodology. In estimating cost disabilities, an attempt is made to isolate the
influence of policy induced inefficiencies.
The Grants Commission estimates two types of cost disability, one for
recurrent expenditures and another for spending on capital. However, the
Commission’s capital cost disabilities are estimated from the recurrent disabilities. This procedure, along with other aspects of the estimation of capital
disabilities, has attracted criticism from the States and the Commission is
currently undertaking a review of its capital equalization methodology.19
The deviation between a State’s cost of providing a particular service and
the average cost is then used to create an estimate of the expenditure need for
that service in State i. Positive expenditure needs arise for a service when a
State faces relatively high costs of providing it. The sum of expenditure needs
across all services determines a State’s total expenditure need, which may be
positive or negative.
The equalization formula combines the revenue and expenditures needs
estimates in such a way that yields, for each State, a ratio that determines the
State’s share of the pool of funds available for distribution. The share of a State
in the revenue pool is determined by the strength of its revenue base relative to
the average and the costs it faces in providing services relative to the average.
A major impact of the formula is to redistribute income from the high
Australia’s federal experience 149
income low cost States to the lower income high cost States. The extent of this
redistribution can be seen by comparing what the States actually receive from
the pool under the equalization model with what they would receive if the
revenue were given back to the States on the basis of where it is raised.
Alternatively, one can examine what the States would receive if there were an
equal per-capita distribution. This last comparison is made in Table 7.3.
Clearly, New South Wales and Victoria (high income and low cost States) and
Western Australia (high income but high cost State) would gain from an equal
per-capita distribution while all other States would lose, relative to the
distribution using the Commission’s formula.
Criticism of the equalization system has been directed at its efficiency costs.
For example, Gramlich (1984) has been highly critical of the equalization
model on efficiency grounds, claiming that it encourages people and capital to
migrate to remote areas that are costly to supply. Dixon et al. (1993) use a
general equilibrium model to argue that equalization leads to inefficient interState migration of capital and labour. Albon (1990) makes similar criticisms.
The system can also be defended on efficiency grounds. An obvious way to
do this is to draw on the well known notion that inter-State transfers may be
required to establish an efficient allocation of mobile factors of production
between States. This argument, developed by Boadway and Flatters (1982),
and refined by others including Myers (1990), Mansoorian and Myers (1993)
and Burbidge and Myers (1994), is that if States have access to taxes on
resource rents, or create fiscal externalities from the operation of their tax and
expenditure systems, a free migration equilibrium in which factors allocate
themselves between States to satisfy some sort of ‘equating at the margin rule’
Table 7.3 The impact of horizontal fiscal equalization, Australia, 2000–01
New South Wales
Victoria
Queensland
Western Australia
South Australia
Tasmania
Australian Capital Territory
Northern Territory
Total
Distribution using
CGC relativities
(1)
Distribution on
equal per-capita basis
(2)
$million
%
$million
%
Difference
(1) – (2)
9,229.2
6,499.3
5,703.3
2,920.1
2,768.0
1,104.0
544.7
1,279.0
30,048.0
30.7
21.6
19.0
9.7
9.2
3.7
1.8
4.3
100.0
10,149.0
7,464.0
5,599.0
2,968.0
2,340.0
730.0
489.0
307.0
30,048.0
33.8
24.8
18.6
9.9
7.8
2.4
1.6
1.0
100.0
–920.0
–965.0
104.0
–48.0
428.0
373.0
55.0
972.0
0.0
Source: Commonwealth Budget Paper No. 3, ‘Federal Financial Relations, 2000–01’.
Notes
Total is equal to $23,955.6 million from the Goods and Services Tax in 2000–01 and $6,092.1 in
Health Care Grants which are also subject to the equalization formula.
150 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
may be inefficient. For example resource-rich States may use rents to provide
location-specific factor subsidies. Inter-State transfers then have the potential
to move factors in such a way that creates efficiency in their geographic distribution and maximizes national welfare.
Dixon et al. (1993) obtain the result that transfers shift factors inefficiently
because they do not allow for the possibility that State taxes on resource rents
and fiscal externalities can lead to inefficient free migration of mobile factors.
Rather, in their model, factors always allocate themselves efficiently across
States in the absence of transfers. Therefore, any inter State transfer induces
inefficiency. This feature of the Dixon et al. (1993) model was emphasized by
Petchey (1995) who, using a model more in the spirit of Boadway and Flatters,
showed that transfers can be efficiency enhancing, and more specifically, that
Australian equalization – even with its inclusion of expenditure needs – may
be efficiency enhancing.
The efficiency effects of Australian equalization, when assessed against factor
mobility arguments, are not yet settled. But one can say that the previously
dominant opinion, that equalization creates inefficiency in the geographic
distribution of resources, has been countered by other arguments. In our view,
the two sides to the debate have probably neutralized one another, and interest
in the issue has now waned to some extent.
Inter-State transfers may also be the glue that holds a federation together,
ensuring federal stability. Briefly, the idea is that some States are winners
from the process of federation while others are losers. The distribution of
winners and losers, and the size of the gains and losses, is dependent upon the
degree of diversity between the States forming a union. Diversity may be
expressed in terms of economic factors such as incomes, preferences, production technologies or endowments of natural resources, as well as in terms of
cultural, ethnic and political differences. If the economic surplus from union
is sufficiently large to compensate the losing States, leaving them no worse off
than they were in autarky (and hopefully better off), while at the same time
making the winning States better off, then the union may be stable in the
sense that no participating State will wish to secede. However, stability may
depend on the existence of inter-State transfers. Moreover, the larger is the
diversity between members of the union, the greater is the need for inter-State
transfers to maintain stability. These conclusions result from the application
of co-operative game theory concepts (where side payments are allowed) to the
theory of federal union.
In Australia’s case, there is some evidence that federal stability was a
significant motivating force behind the creation of the Commonwealth Grants
Commission in 1933.20 However, since then federal stability has become less
of an issue in Australia – especially since there is now such a high degree of
homogeneity between the States. It would be difficult to defend equalization
in Australia, at least in modern times, on federal stability arguments. The
factor mobility–efficiency case has also, with the exception of Petchey
(1995), not generally been used to justify Australian equalization. Rather, the
Australia’s federal experience 151
prominent view is that equalization is designed to support uniformity in the
provision of access to public services across States – an equity goal.
Conclusion
Regional unions of States are susceptible to centralization and the sustained
loss of autonomy by member States. A benefit is that the union gains from
scale economies associated with tax collection, and also the provision of public
goods. Central action also allows a union of States to pursue common interests.
But there are costs including a loss of policy diversity. This cost is considerable
if preferences, resource endowments and technologies of the member states are
very different. Also, if one is seduced by the notion that governments pursue
their own agendas, the concentration of tax powers may not be in the best
interests of citizens. Achieving the most desirable degree of central versus
decentralized responsibilities is a matter of balancing the costs and benefits.
The aim of a regional union, such as the European Union, should be to
develop a distribution of tax and spending powers that minimizes the costs of
central action and maximizes the benefits. This will entail the development of
mechanisms to protect member state interests as the power of the centre grows,
as it must in order to deal with matters of common interest to the Union. The
Australian experience suggests that explicit political and constitutional constraints on central power are difficult to design and may not work in practice.
If the European Union expands to accept more States from the eastern
borders of the Union (e.g. States from the former Soviet Bloc) then the Union
will also become much more disparate in terms of incomes and preferences
over public policy outcomes. As a result, there will be greater migration of
mobile factors of production, including capital and certain types of labour,
from poorer eastern States to richer western States as the borders are opened.
Fears of such migration are causing resistance to further integration. They
have led to recent calls, by countries such as Germany, for polices designed to
curtail the expected influx of labour. One proposal is that labour in the
currently excluded States be made to wait for seven years (after integration)
before being able to acquire a job in one of the existing member states.
An alternative, and perhaps more effective response, would be for the Union
to consider a system of inter-State equalization transfers. We know from the
discussion here that inter-State equalization transfers, in this case from the
richer to the poorer States, have the potential to reduce any inefficient migration that may follow from an expansion of membership. Thus, the further
planned expansion of the Union may need to be accompanied by the introduction of a formal system of Union wide equalization. This may mean considering,
at the very least, a system of tax base equalization, which estimates revenue
needs of member states. The Australian experience also suggests that there are
benefits to having a formal and transparent system of inter-State redistribution, implemented by a separate institution that is responsible directly to
the central parliament.
152 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
Notes
1 Two territories (the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory) have
been created since federation. These operate like States for most purposes and in
what follows references to States can also be taken to refer to the territories. The
third tier of government – local government – includes urban municipal
authorities and rural authorities. These are not sovereign entities and have no
status in the Australian constitution, although they do have status in State
constitutions.
2 All the colonies were on the gold standard prior to federation, so monetary union
preceded formation of a customs union, reversing the European sequence.
3 For discussion of this argument, see Coper (1988).
4 Deakin 1901, p. 17.
5 Examination of time series data (not displayed) on revenue and expenditure shares
confirms that these observations are long run trends. We have presented
observations for two years only for presentational convenience.
6 See Laffer (1942).
7 Yearbook of the Commonwealth of Australia, No.36 1944–45, p. 730.
8 Peterswald v Bartley (1904).
9 There were, until recently, three exceptions: the States were allowed to levy
franchise fees on tobacco, alcohol and petroleum products. The Court justified this
by arguing that franchise fees are taxes on the right to conduct business rather than
consumption itself (this interpretation relied on the use of the previous year’s sales
as the fee base). Recently, however, even these loopholes have been closed and the
Commonwealth on behalf of the States now collects franchise fees, with the
revenue being returned to the States using a distribution formula.
10 Commonwealth Budget Paper No. 3, 2000–01.
11 The efficiency arguments are discussed in Freebairn (1998).
12 See the arguments in Petchey and Shapiro (1997a).
13 As is discussed later, the distribution of the GST revenue is determined by a fiscal
equalization formula (as were the old Financial Assistance Grants which are
replaced by the GST revenue).
14 See Wildasin (1988).
15 We do not know whether the poem is imagined (by Kelly) or real, and assume the
‘cow’ to be a representative taxpayer.
16 The Premiers’ Conference is an annual meeting between state premiers and the
Prime Minister to coordinate intergovernmental financial issues.
17 The Financial Agreement was a formal contract between the States and the
Commonwealth, in the sense that the Loan Council was established by an
amendment to the Constitution.
18 Commonwealth of Australia (2000) Table B4.
19 The only empirical estimates of capital cost disabilities for the Australian States
are to be found in Petchey, Shapiro, MacDonald and Koshy (2000).
20 See May (1971).
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154 Jeff Petchey and Graeme Wells
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8
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland
A public choice approach
Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
Introduction
One of the fundamental problems of political systems is that governments
strong enough to protect individual property rights are strong enough to
confiscate the wealth of their citizens too (Weingast, 1995). To resolve this
dilemma, from a public choice point of view constitutional rules are needed to
prevent politicians from abusing their power. Checks and balances must
create credible commitments for self-enforcing institutions. Federalism is an
important institution of this kind.
The meaning of federalism as a principle of political order is not clearly
defined. Many different interpretations exist. Following Riker (1964), we
characterize the federalist system by hierarchy and autonomy of different
layers of government. In this sense, federalism is based on the principle of
subsidiarity. As a concept of a social and constitutional order, the meaning of
subsidiarity can be traced back to Johannes Althusius, a juridical savant of the
seventeenth century. He claimed that government authority and sovereignty
should be based on a bottom-up approach. Thus, the legitimacy of the upperlevel authority has to be justified on the basis of lower-level organizations.
According to this definition, the Swiss constitution comes very close to the
core meaning of a federalist organization. Inspired by the US constitution of
1787, the fathers of the Swiss constitution have reached national unity by a
very large autonomy of the sub-federal jurisdictions in 1848.1 Anyhow, the
Swiss federalism has its own peculiarities. It differs in many respects from the
federalist organization of other countries.
The aim of this chapter is twofold. First, we summarize the main characteristics of federalism in Switzerland. Second, we show that it can be adequately
characterized by Hirschman’s (1970) concept of exit, voice, and loyalty. We
argue that the interaction of these institutions can make a constitution selfenforcing. And we will show that the Swiss federalism, far from being perfect,
works well in reality.
The chapter proceeds as follows. In Section 2, some stylized facts about
federalism in Switzerland are presented. In Section 3, we argue that fragmentation and fiscal autonomy in the Swiss federalism provide substantial
restrictions on government behaviour and, therefore, lead to a comparably
156 Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
smaller size of the public sector. Section 4 deals with the voice mechanism.
Direct democratic institutions are a suitable means to reduce principal agent
problems between the voters and their representatives. Direct democracy
enriches politics with competition. In Section 5, we raise the issue of loyalty
and its connection with exit and voice. Section 6 presents some conclusions.
Stylized facts about Swiss federalism
At first sight, the federalist system of Switzerland is similar to those of
Germany, Australia, Canada, Austria and the United States. All these countries
have a federalist constitution where important policy tasks are at least partly
reserved for sub-national jurisdictions. However, there are institutional
characteristics in Switzerland leading to a special federalist system in terms of
scale, autonomy and democratic decision-making.
Switzerland is characterized by a high diversity of geographical conditions,
economic potential, size and degree of democratic institutions. Its small scale
federalism is organized on three governmental layers: the central government,
26 cantons and some 3,000 municipalities. The sub-national jurisdictions are
very small. The average canton has 270,000, the average municipality 2,400
inhabitants. The tasks of the central government are explicitly enumerated in
the federal constitution. Competence on major policy fields, especially fiscal
affairs, is extensive on the cantonal and municipal level. The cantons have full
autonomy to the extent that it is not restricted by the federal constitution.
Constitutional changes can only be effected by voters’ approval (compulsory
referenda) and additionally need the support of a majority of the cantons. The
cantons levy their own income and property taxes. The tax tariffs, tax rates and
tax exemptions are in the cantonal competence. Even the municipalities are
autonomous in deciding on the tax burden. They normally levy their taxes as a
per centage of the cantonal level. This increases the autonomy of the subnational jurisdictions on the expenditure side, too. As a consequence fiscal
competition is very strong in Switzerland.
The central government has the right to raise its own income tax. The federal
income tax is based on a sunset legislation. It must be renewed by popular vote
by 2006 at the next. Fiscal policy on the upper level is mainly based on
consumption taxes. Table 8.1 shows the revenue shares of the three levels.
They have been rather stable during the last decades.
The democratic institutions in Switzerland are closely related to the
federalist structure. Instruments of direct democracy are established on all
three levels of government. On the central level, the popular initiative and the
referendum allow people to influence parliamentary decisions. The initiative
is a formal proposition to modify the constitution. It must be signed by at
least 100,000 citizens within a period of 18 months. The share of the required
voter signatures fell from 7.5 per cent in 1893 when the initiative was introduced to some 2 per cent today (Kleinewefers, 1995). The Federal Council and
the Federal Assembly have a kind of advisory position. Their constitutional
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland 157
Table 8.1 Structure and trend of public revenue in Switzerland, by % of total revenue
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
1997
Federal level
Total taxes
Income and property taxes
Consumption taxes
User charges
84.0
32.8
51.2
6.5
84.1
24.4
59.7
7.5
90.0
28.3
61.7
4.5
88.8
33.2
55.6
4.2
93.7
34.4
51.9
3.9
89.3
37.5
51.8
2.4
Cantonal level
Total taxes
Income and property taxes
Consumption taxes
User charges
Vertical transfers
49.5
44.5
5.0
16.3
24.6
55.9
49.7
6.2
15.6
20.9
52.9
47.9
5.0
12.4
29.3
54.1
50.1
4.0
14.2
27.1
57.4
45.1
3.3
15.9
24.0
46.0
36.9
3.0
15.1
27.7
Municipal level
Total taxes
Income and property taxes
Consumption taxes
User charges
Vertical transfers
55.8
55.1
0.7
24.0
9.6
60.9
60.1
0.8
14.9
17.1
58.1
57.7
0.4
15.4
17.7
51.0
50.8
0.2
25.6
16.1
53.2
46.0
0.3
23.9
18.6
47.4
42.1
0.1
26.8
17.8
Source: Feld (2000b: 165).
proposals and counter-proposals must be confirmed by a majority of voters
and cantons in ballots. The referendum, on the other hand, is a constitutional
right of the citizens to approve federal laws and treaties. There exists a
mandatory referendum for revisions of the constitution, urgent acts without
constitutional basis and international treaties. The optional referenda against
parliamentary decisions has to be signed by 50,000 citizens within 100 days
after the publication of the decree. This means that today only about 1 per cent
of the voters have to give their signature to launch a ballot whereas in 1879
this share was of nearly 5 per cent (Kleinewefers, 1995).
Over the past 150 years, there were 194 mandatory and 137 optional
referenda on the national level. In 35 per cent of all cases popular referenda
have corrected the decisions of the federal parliament (25 per cent for
mandatory referenda and 50 per cent for optional referenda). Since 1891, when
the popular initiatives were established, 104 initiatives have been launched.
They were less successful. The acceptance rate was of 10 per cent only (Swiss
Statistical Yearbook, 2000). However, by way of counterproposals an indirect
success is often achieved. The parliament accepts a part of the popular
initiative when presenting a counter-proposal, which the voters in many cases
accept at the ballot.
On the cantonal and local level popular rights are even more developed.
Recently, Stutzer and Frey (2000) proposed an index of democracy for the
Swiss cantons (cf. Figure 8.1). They include the constitutional initiative, the
legislative initiative, the legislative referendum and the fiscal referendum on
158 Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
Figure 8.1 Index of democracy for Switzerland.
Note: the figure shows the extent of direct democratic rights in the 26 Swiss cantons. The
abbreviations stand for the following cantons: Aargau (AG), Appenzell-Innerrhoden (AI),
Appenzell-Ausserrhoden (AR), Bern (BE), Basel-Landschaft (BL), Basel-Stadt (BS), Fribourg
(FR), Genève (GE), Glarus (GL), Graubünden (GR), Jura (JU), Luzern (LU), Neuchâtel (NE),
Nidwalden (NW), Obwalden (OW), Schaffhausen (SH), Schwyz (SZ), St. Gallen (SG),
Solothurn (SO), Thurgau (TG), Ticino (TI), Uri (UR), Vaud (VD), Valais (VS), Zug (ZG),
Zürich (ZH).
an index to reflect the extent of direct democratic rights on the cantonal level
in a range between 1 (lowest degree) and 6 (highest degree).
In 1959, Switzerland established a new system of intergovernmental transfers and revenue sharing (see Tables 8.2 and 8.3). This transfer system
constitutes an important policy instrument in the hands of the federal
government. The Swiss grants-in-aid are either conditional or unconditional.
In accordance with the normative theory of public finance (e.g. Musgrave,
1959) and fiscal federalism (e.g. Oates, 1972), the former serve as a means to
internalize spillover benefits whereas the latter are designed to improve the
fiscal capacity of the poorer jurisdictions. Conditional grants normally take
the form of matching grants. The recipients are bound by various restrictions
so that the subsidies give local and cantonal decision-makers incentives to
incorporate spillover benefits into their decision-making calculus. If regional
disparities are to be reduced, unconditional grants should be designed as lumpsum transfers and revenue sharing. However, these instruments are not very
important in the Swiss system of intergovernmental grants nowadays.
During the last decades, the system of intergovernmental transfers and
revenue sharing in Switzerland has become very intransparent in three respects
(Frey et al., 1994). First, the mixture of instruments targeting at efficiency as
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland 159
Table 8.2 Revenues of the three levels of government (%)
Federal level
Cantonal level
Communal level
1975 1985 1995 1975 1985 1995 1975 1985 1995
Income and property taxes
Consumption and
expenditure taxes
Fiscal monopolies and
licences
Revenues from public
property
Revenue sharing
Grants-in-aid
Indemnities and sales
Total
32.2 38.6 33.7 51.5 51.7 49.3 58.3 49.8 47.4
57.0 54.0 56.6
2.2
1.8
0.6
3.6
3.1
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.7
0.7
1.2
–
–
0.3
3.3 2.2 5.6 3.3 3.7 4.1 7.2 6.0 6.8
–
–
– 5.7 5.6 6.7 1.2 1.3 3.0
0.3 0.1 0.1 22.5 20.4 19.7 16.9 17.7 16.4
4.9 3.3 3.3 12.6 14.3 15.9 16.3 25.0 26.0
100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Source: Federal Ministry of Finance.
Table 8.3 Share of federal aid on total cantonal
revenue, 1997
Cantons
%
Zurich (ZH)
Berne (BE)
Lucerne (LU)
Uri (UR)
Schwyz (SZ)
Obwalden (OW)
Nidwalden (NW)
Glarus (GL)
Zoug (ZG)
Fribourg (FR)
Solothurn (SO)
Basel-City (BS)
Basel-Country (BL)
Schaffhausen (SH)
Appenzell Ausserrhoden (AR)
Appenzell Innerrhoden (AI)
St. Gallen (SG)
Grisons (GR)
Aargau (AG)
Thurgau (TG)
Ticino (TI)
Vaud (VD)
Valais (VS)
Neuchâtel (NE)
Geneva (GE)
Jura (JU)
14.2
29.3
27.5
54.0
36.8
49.3
30.0
24.7
22.8
36.8
29.0
9.8
16.0
18.5
29.6
39.5
23.8
40.2
18.0
24.2
24.4
20.9
42.2
36.2
9.9
53.1
Source: Stalder (1999: 81).
3.7
160 Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
well as intercantonal redistribution often leads to curious results. Neither of
the two objectives are attained in an efficient manner. Second, the system of
intergovernmental grants is mainly based on vertical transfers from the federal
to the cantonal level. In order to internalize benefit spillovers, horizontal
transfers would be more appropriate. Third, transfers for equalization purposes are often developed as conditional grants. This induces the cantons and
municipalities to deviate from the preferences of their own constituencies.
Due to these defects, a fundamental reform of the intergovernmental transfers
system is planned for the next years.
Federalism by autonomy and fragmentation: the role of exit
In this section, we will analyze the impact of the federalist institutions on the
fiscal behavior of the sub-federal governments. For a public choice approach of
fiscal federalism in Switzerland, Hirschman’s (1970) concept of the interaction between exit, voice, and loyalty offers an appropriate guideline. Three
reasons support this view. First, a high degree of fragmentation and the far
reaching fiscal autonomy of the small sub-national jurisdictions represent
favourable conditions for migrations. The exit option is easy to take as transaction costs are low. Thus, the competitive pressure of fiscal federalism is
expected to be particularly pronounced in Switzerland. Second, on the subnational level a huge variety of institutions of direct democracy is established,
encouraging political participation by the citizens (voice). Third, given the
inter-jurisdictional variety, the conditions for promoting loyalty by a specific
institutional setting can be investigated (loyalty).
Our starting point is that federalist institutions matter for government
behaviour. According to Stigler and Becker (1977) this is sensible since
government behaviour can be explained by different institutional settings
rather than by the regional variety of voter preferences. For our analysis, two
institutions of interest are crucial: fragmentation and fiscal autonomy.
In 1956, Tiebout published his famous paper on fiscally induced migration.
He provides a solution to Samuelson’s (1954) argument that there is no demandrevealing-process for individual preferences in the case of public goods. By
selecting the jurisdiction which can best satisfy the preferences of consumervoters, the process of ‘voting with one’s feet’ will lead to an efficient allocation
of local public goods. However, this only holds under rather restrictive
assumptions. Intergovernmental competition as an efficient demand-revealing process for local public goods implies that, among other things, consumervoters are fully mobile, there is a large number of communities to choose and
consumer-voters are fully informed about the performance of local governments. Since these assumptions are not fulfilled in reality, the predictions of
an efficiency-enhancing Tiebout competition has been widely discussed.2
Years later, the Leviathan hypothesis – based on Tiebout’s reflection – led
to government size interpretations. In contrast to Tiebout, Brennan and
Buchanan (1977, 1978, 1980) do not make statements about government
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland 161
efficiency. In their analysis they assert that increased fiscal decentralization
will lead to a smaller government size. Their hypothesis spots governments as
a revenue-maximizing Leviathan exploiting its citizenry through excessive
taxation. They argue that larger governmental units are less efficient because
each jurisdiction exploits the spatial monopoly unless it is constrained by the
exit threat. In order to restrict the monopoly power of a Leviathan government, fiscal decentralization is needed. The mobility of voters forces
governments to implement policy reforms in accordance with the preferences
of their inhabitants. The more fragmented a country, the harder these
constraints are limiting the discretionary leeway of the local and cantonal
politicians. In other words, fiscally induced migration in a highly centralized
country will disappear since its transaction costs are too high. Hence, a high
degree of fragmentation offers exit possibilities for comparably low transaction costs and therefore serves as a substitute for the incomplete political
competition among parties and candidates.
Though geographical fragmentation is a necessary condition of a sustainable federalism, it is not sufficient. Fiscal autonomy on the state and local level
has to be secured so that lower-level governments can decide by themselves
which tasks to tackle. The federal government should be restricted to policy
tasks with the characteristics of national public goods.
Empirical investigations have tried to provide evidence on the relative
advantage of decentralization. The results are mainly drawn from the US
American or Canadian sub-national level. While Oates (1985), Nelson (1986)
and Forbes and Zampelli (1989) fail to support the Leviathan hypothesis,
Nelson (1987), Zax (1989), Joulfaian and Marlow (1990) and Grossman and
West (1994) provide evidence in favour of the predictions made by Brennan
and Buchanan. Strikingly, the effect of decentralization on the size of government can be traced back to the level of data aggregation and may reflect two
different effects of decentralization. On the one hand, according to Wallis and
Oates (1988), it is reasonable that decentralization on the local level leads to a
larger size of government since individuals have more control over public
decisions and therefore are ready to transfer a broader range of functions and
responsibilities to the local officials. On the other hand, decentralization
restricts the overall government size. Therefore, the contradictory empirical
results do not necessarily have to be inconsistent. Evidence for this inverse
relationship between the level of decentralization and the public sector size
was brought up by Joulfaian and Marlow (1990) and recently underlined by
Shadbegian (1999).
For Switzerland, there is only little evidence of the effects of fiscal decentralization on the size of government. In a recent study, Schaltegger (2001) uses a
pooled cross-section analysis from 1988 to 1998 to investigate the effects of
fragmentation and fiscal autonomy. The results strongly support the predictions made by Brennan and Buchanan. In accordance with empirical studies in
other federalist countries, in Switzerland these fiscal institutions matter in
public decision-making and result in a significantly smaller size of government.
162 Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
Critics of the Leviathan hypothesis argue that analysing government size
provides no information about efficiency. Moreover, it is claimed that systems
competition between governments induced by the mobility of voters results
in serious allocative distortions. Local officials are forced to hold down tax rates
and consequently the provision of public goods. As a result, fiscal competition
among jurisdictions leads to a ‘race-to-the-bottom’. Therefore, it may be
ruinous for governments to compete for footloose tax payers (Sinn, 1997).
This line of argumentation has become quite powerful in the political
discourse. Tax harmonization is a political claim in Switzerland, too. In a
recent study, Feld (2000a) shows that a ‘race-to-the-bottom’ for redistributional taxation cannot be detected with respect for the sub-national level.
He concludes that the reason for this result lies in specific institutional
arrangements which stabilize decentralized redistribution. Feld puts emphasis on the aspect of procedural fairness by popular participation rights in
politics: ‘The strong fiscal competence of local jurisdictions and cantons may
not lead to the problems associated with fiscal competition if they are
accompanied by elements of direct democracy at least on fiscal issues’ (p. 154).
In addition, there is a controversial debate on the relative advantage of
larger or smaller jurisdictions. While federalism is seen to be more efficient in
serving citizen’s satisfaction, unitary systems permit the exploitation of economies
of scale in the provision of public goods (Oates, 1999). More precisely, with a
pure public good in the Samuelson sense, consumption by one person does not
rival consumption by others. The costs of providing public services are
independent of the number of users. Especially in Switzerland, where
jurisdictions are particularly small (the smallest canton accounts for some
15,000 inhabitants), mergers should theoretically allow to exploit economies
of scale. There is a huge empirical literature on increasing returns to scale
challenging the presumption of non-rivalry of publicly provided goods (for a
review compare Reiter and Weichenrieder, 1997).3 For Switzerland, there are
studies by Pommerehne (1974), Pommerehne and Frey (1976), Pommerehne
(1978), Blankart (1978) and Schaltegger (2001). They find in general that the
publicly provided goods on the sub-federal level have roughly the same amount
of rivalry as private goods. Thus, there is no evidence that larger jurisdictions
can be managed more efficiently than smaller units due to economies of scale.
A possible explanation for the so-called urban crisis comes from a lack of
fiscal equivalence in the Swiss federalism. It is argued that central cities are
carrying the financial burden of providing public goods to their entire
agglomeration, whereas the suburbs can benefit from these externalities
without adequately sharing the costs. Therefore, strong incentives for a flight
to the suburbs may occur and provoke a fiscal erosion of central cities.
However, one possibility to internalize inter-jurisdictional benefit spillovers
can be seen in a Coasian bargaining process between involved parties (Inman
and Rubinfeld, 1997). Indeed, Pommerehne and Krebs (1991) report the case
of the city of Zurich, where the suburbs and the central city have found a way
in solving spillover problems by agreement.
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland 163
Summing up, Swiss federalism offers exit options for unsatisfied voters, as
due to its high degree of fragmentation and fiscal autonomy, transaction costs
are low. Fiscal decentralization serves as a hard budget constraint on the
decisions of cantonal and municipal governments. But transaction costs for
migration will not create a perfect contestable market even when there is a
high degree of fiscal decentralization. Therefore, another instrument is needed
to limit government discretion. This instrument is democratic competition
(voice).
Federalism preserving democracy: the role of voice
Federalism can only be a successful limitation for policy makers when its
institutions are self-enforcing. Thus, we may ask which institutions make
Swiss federalism sustainable. In his seminal work, Downs (1957) concludes
that democratic competition has much in common with competition in the
free-market economy. However, electoral competition in a framework of
representative democratic institutions will not necessarily lead to a policy
outcome according to the preferences of the median voter (Pommerehne and
Schneider, 1978). There is a leeway for politicians to deviate from the voter
preferences and to pursue their own ideological and economic aims. There is
evidence for ideological shirking in politics (Kalt and Zupan, 1984, 1990).
Since the sub-national level in Switzerland has many specific characteristics
concerning direct democratic institutions, it provides an appropriate laboratory
to analyse the influence of different democratic arrangements on public
decision-making. Pommerehne (1978) shows for 111 Swiss cities that there is
a significant difference in budgetary decision-making under direct democratic legislation compared to purely representative democracies. A major
reason lies in the power of agenda-setting (Frey and Bohnet, 1993). Although
the parliamentary opposition has strong incentives to raise issues unwelcome
to the government, they do not put things on the agenda which are disadvantageous for politicians as a whole. In contrast, under direct democratic
circumstances, outsiders can put issues on the political agenda via the popular
initiative. Frey (1994) argues that ‘popular referenda are feasible and effective
institutions to fulfill individual preferences and are able to break the cartel of
politicians directed against voters and taxpayers’ (p. 338).
Assuming that voters are fiscal conservatives (Peltzman, 1992), the
instability of a cartel among politicians due to directly democratic rights
should have sizeable effects for public households. Feld and Matsusaka (2000)
provide evidence that fiscal referenda in Swiss cantons reduce the budget by
17 per cent for the median canton.4 Moreover, there is also evidence that the
voters care more about fiscal discipline in terms of public debt than their
elected representatives in Switzerland (Feld and Kirchgässner, 1999). Finally,
Feld and Savioz (1997) show that the cantons with stronger elements of direct
democracy enjoy a per-capita income 5.4 per cent higher than in cantons with
weakly established popular rights. Freitag and Vatter (2000) underline this
164 Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
conclusion. However, they emphasize that the use of instruments of direct
democracy (‘rules in use’) is of greater importance than the pure existence of
such instruments (‘rules in form’).
Discussions prior to votes is a major aspect of decision-making in a direct
democracy. Bohnet and Frey (1994) argue that the process of verbal exchange
puts new arguments on the political agenda which would not have been
discussed without direct democratic institutions. This gives politicians information about the preferences of the voters on political topics. Additionally, it
diminishes the informational advantage and thus the discretionary leeway of
political agenda setters to deviate from voters’ wishes. Feld and Kirchgässner
(2000) assert that elements of direct democracy may also enhance citizen’s
willingness to bear information costs. This is of importance, because public
decisions have a common pool character for voters, so that they have very little
incentive to be well-informed when making decisions at the polls. But in
contrast to representative democratic circumstances, the fundamental problem
of ‘rational ignorance’ is less grave under direct democratic circumstances.
Collecting information about political issues that affect their personal
situation is important for the voters. Therefore, it is rational for them to
collect information about policies and to engage in discussions evaluating
different opinions.
Moreover, direct democracy has an impact on the degree of centralization.
Harmonization by delegating competence from lower-level to upper-level
governments weakens the advantages of a federalism. Nevertheless, most
federalist countries are confronted with a secular trend towards centralization,
for politicians on the lower levels have strong incentives to form tax cartels in
order to avoid the disciplinary power of fiscal federalism. Tax harmonization
and co-ordination of expenditure across jurisdictions are the easiest way to
achieve this goal. However, such cartels are inherently unstable. The federal
government is needed to enforce their stability, for example, by vertical
intergovernmental grants. In return for an appropriate share of the sub-federal
tax receipts, the central level penalizes cartel escapees to assure the collusive
agreements (Brennan and Buchanan, 1980). According to Blankart (2000),
the low level of government centralization in Switzerland compared to Germany can be explained by institutions of direct democracy. In Switzerland, the
federal government is only allowed to have new tax competences when the
majority of the voters and cantons give their approval. Thus, referenda represent a strong instrument to weaken the cartel stability for collusive agreements even though it cannot prevent them.
All in all, direct democratic institutions play an important role in securing
the geographically fragmented and fiscally autonomous structure of subfederal governments in Switzerland. Direct democracy makes federalism a
self-enforcing institution because it credibly limits the power of politicians to
discretionarily change the constitutional rules.
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland 165
The interaction of exit and voice: the role of loyalty
The interpretation of exit and voice for the Swiss case is clear since it can be
associated with specific institutions. This does not hold for loyalty. In his essay
on the interaction between exit and voice, Hirschman (1970: 77) postulates:
‘A more solid understanding of the conditions favouring coexistence of exit
and voice is gained by introducing the concept of loyalty’. Therewith,
rigidities of migration cannot only be explained by transaction costs and sunk
costs due to investments in specific assets like reputation, business relation,
linguistic proficiency, social network and friendship (Wohlgemuth and
Adamovich, 1999). Feld (1997) shows that there is a trade-off between exit
and voice. The stronger the direct democratic rights are established, the lower
is the probability that voters migrate. This indicates that citizens esteem the
ability to influence decisions in their jurisdiction. Accordingly, loyalty of
members of an organization is endogenously influenced by institutions which
promote trust. Feld using a capitalization approach provides empirical evidence
that the institution of direct democracy on the Swiss sub-federal level can
promote loyalty. More precisely, fiscal competition is particularly pronounced
in purely representative cantons, whereas in cantons with a high degree of
direct democracy exit is less often used.
The communicative aspect of direct democracy may also enhance people’s
consideration about fairness in the decision-making process (Frey and Bohnet,
1995). People do not follow the law because they are forced to do so, but
because they are convinced that the law is justified (Tyler, 1990). The procedural effect of decision-making, especially direct democratic rules, enhance
the law’s legitimacy. This point is stressed by Pommerehne and WeckHannemann (1996) in the specific case of tax evasion in Switzerland. They
show that tax morale is higher in cantons with direct legislation than in the
other ones. Political participation allows citizens to exert strong control over
government decisions. The willingness and loyalty to contribute to the
financing of government activities is higher. In a recent study, Feld and Frey
(2000) argue that the interaction of taxpayers and tax authorities is relevant
for tax morale. The implicit psychological contract between principals and
agents can be supported by direct political participation rights. In direct democracies, taxpayers are treated with more respect than in purely representative
democracies. This reciprocity stabilizes the contract between taxpayers and
tax authorities.
Frey and Stutzer (2000) provide empirical evidence that the institutional
arrangements determine the subjective well-being. They conclude that in
Switzerland direct democracy together with federalism in the sense of local
autonomy has a strong effect on the reported happiness. There are two
important aspects. First, in direct democracies agents are forced to follow the
voter preferences. Second, the voters derive a benefit from direct participation
in the decision-making process. Thus, institutional determinants can promote
a relationship between principals and agents based on trust.
Table 8.4 Empirical studies on the impact of federalism on economic policy in Switzerland
Hypothesis
Authors
Sample
Time period
Results
Exit
Schaltegger
Schaltegger
Schaltegger and Küttel
Feld and Matsusaka
Feld and Kirchgässner
Feld and Savioz
26 cantons
26 cantons
26 cantons
26 cantons
131 cities
26 cantons
1988–1998
1988–1998
1980–1998
1986–1997
1990
1982–1993
Freitag and Vatter
26 cantons
1983–1997
Schaltegger and Küttel
26 cantons
1980–1998
Feld
26 cantons
1990
Federalism by fragmentation leads to lower public expenditure/revenue
Federalism by fiscal autonomy leads to lower public expenditure/revenue
Federalism leads to lower public expenditure, revenue and tax receipts
Fiscal referenda lead to 17% lower per-capita expenditure
Direct democracy leads to a lower public debt
Cantons with strong elements of direct democracy have a 5.4% higher
GDP
Cantons which use elements of direct democracy, to a greater extent, have
a higher GDP
Direct democracy leads to lower public expenditure, revenue and tax
receipts
Direct democracy leads to less migration, i.e. to a higher loyalty towards
decisions of the government
Pommerehne and WeckHannemann
Feld and Frey
25 cantons
26 cantons
1965, 1970, 1978 Direct democracy leads to lower tax evasion
2000
Direct democracy is an asset to secure the implicit contract between the
voters and the authorities
Voice
Loyalty
Fiscal federalism in Switzerland 167
Conclusion
In this chapter we have analysed Swiss federalism using Hirschman’s three
concepts of response to decline in firms, organizations, and states: exit, voice,
and loyalty. Influenced by his observation on rail transport in Nigeria,
Hirschman has developed a concept to illuminate the variety of functional
behaviour in economic, social and political systems. He writes (1970: 7): ‘I
had come upon a manner of analyzing certain economic processes which
promised to illuminate a wide range of social, political, and indeed moral
phenomena.’
The concept of exit, voice, and loyalty is a useful means to understand the
basic procedures in Swiss federalism, too. In our analysis we interpret exit by
the extent of decentralization on the sub-national level. More precisely, our
analysis examines the impact of fragmentation and fiscal autonomy for the
fiscal performance of a canton. Theoretical arguments as well as empirical
findings strongly support the view that exit represents a suitable way to
discipline public decision-makers. Federalism does not only serve to adapt
public services to the regionally different preferences of the citizens. It is also
an effective instrument to restrict the politicians’ discretionary leeway to
deviate from citizens’ wishes. The fear that systems competition between
jurisdictions, as it results from fiscal decentralization, could lead to a ‘race-tothe-bottom’ cannot be proved for the Swiss case. Despite the strong degree of
fiscal decentralization, a considerable amount of tax redistribution on the
cantonal level can be observed.
Since a federalist constitution by itself is not sustainable the question arises:
what is the institutional reason that makes a federal system self-enforcing?
The Swiss sub-federal level is characterized by a large diversity of arrangements in direct democracy. It therefore represents an ideal object to examine
the effects of voice in addition to exit. Empirical evidence supports the view
that differences in popular participation rights on the cantonal level reflect
major differences in policy outcome. Direct legislation urges politicians to
adapt their policy choices according to the will of the citizens. This results in a
better fiscal performance. In addition, voice represents a strong means to
control centralization. However, voice does not only serve as an instrument to
discipline incumbents. It also promotes loyalty between the voters and their
representatives. Accordingly, voice is an asset to secure the implicit contract
between principals (voters) and agents (representatives). It is direct democracy
that makes federalism self-enforcing.
In this chapter we have detected some institutional arrangements for government size and stability in the Swiss federalism. Are there any suggestions for
the European Union one could feel comfortable in recommending? We are
reluctant to do so. In many ways Switzerland is similar to the European Union:
different cultural backgrounds, languages, size and economic potential of and
within the member countries. Nevertheless, there is little evidence in favour
of the transferability of institutions. The question of how, when and why
168 Christoph A. Schaltegger and René L. Frey
governments should adopt institutional reforms remains therefore an important challenge for future research.
Notes
1 Blöchliger and Frey (1992) provide an economic interpretation of the emergence of
federal structures in Switzerland.
2 For a review of the empirical literature, compare Dowding, John and Biggs (1994).
3 Borcherding and Deacon (1972) were among the first to empirically investigate
the effect of jurisdictional size on government expenditure.
4 A comparable study by Matsusaka (1995) comes to similar results with respect to
the United States.
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9
Fiscal institutions, regional
adjustment and convergence
in Canada’s currency union
Lessons for EMU
Tracy R. Snoddon
Introduction
The formation of a currency union requires that members give over control of
monetary policy to a single, common authority and, in exchange, members
share in the benefits of a common currency. In the case of Canada’s currency
union, control of monetary policy lies with the Bank of Canada; for countries
participating in the relatively young EMU, the responsibility for monetary
policy has shifted from national central banks to the European Central Bank.
To support their respective currency unions, Canada and the EMU have
adopted different fiscal institutions. In particular, fiscal transfers in Canada,
large by international standards and an integral feature of Canada’s model of
fiscal federalism, are comparatively small in the European Union. The EMU
has instead adopted a policy of tight fiscal rules to which no formal equivalent
exists in Canada.
This chapter examines the contribution of these different fiscal institutions
to two important issues in the context of a common currency and a single
monetary policy – regional economic adjustment and stabilization and long
run economic convergence. The EMU’s fiscal harmonization policies and
explicit convergence criteria aim to reduce long run economic divergences
between members and enhance economic and social cohesion in the currency
union. With adherence to the fiscal criteria, members acquire the fiscal room
to manage their own short run fluctuations and thereby reducing the need for
stabilizing fiscal transfers. The latter goal is important, since with the move to
a single currency, individual members lose the tool of independent monetary
policy for managing economic fluctuations. By promoting economic convergence among its members, pressures for redistributive transfers in the EMU can
be reduced. In theory, this is a prudent strategy since the potential of the EU
government to make large fiscal transfers is restricted by its narrowly defined
responsibilities and comparatively small budget. In Canada, the federal government’s redistributive fiscal transfers target economic disparities. Fiscal
transfers also help stabilize regional economies in the presence of differential
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 173
shocks. Relative to the common EU government, Canada’s federal government
is comparatively unrestricted in its capacity to make and finance such transfers.
Given the differences in the approaches of Canada and the EMU, the
obvious question is whether fiscal transfers and fiscal rules are close substitutes
for addressing long run economic disparities and for helping members of a
currency union adjust to short run, country-specific shocks? If not, are there
inherent differences in the functioning of the two currency unions that limit
the substitutability between these different approaches? To address these
questions, this chapter investigates the contribution of Canada’s system of fiscal
federalism to long run economic convergence and to short run regional adjustment. An overview of the most salient features of fiscal federalism in Canada is
presented in section 2. This section outlines the complex array of fiscal
arrangements that, in addition to the constitution, determine the assignment of
responsibilities and powers to different governments in Canada. For comparison, key fiscal institutions in the EMU are also discussed. Section 3 assesses
the impact of Canada’s system of fiscal federalism on the range and effectiveness of regional adjustment to differential shocks. The section compares the
impact of fiscal transfers on regional adjustment in Canada with the European
Union’s system of fiscal rules. Both currency unions support long run
economic convergence. Section 4 assesses the contribution of fiscal transfers in
Canada and fiscal rules in the EMU to this goal. A summary of the chapter’s
main findings and concluding remarks are presented in the final section.
Comparative overview of fiscal institutions in Canada
and EMU
It is necessary to first outline some important design features of the Canadian
federation and the link between these features and the goals of regional adjustment, stabilization and convergence. This section highlights key differences
in fiscal institutions in Canada and in the EMU. A brief description of the
Canadian federation is followed by a review of the powers and responsibilities
of the federal and provincial governments and their EMU counterparts. Fiscal
transfers and fiscal rules in the two currency unions are then outlined. The
section ends with a brief description of harmonization policies in the two
currency unions.
Allocation of responsibilities and finances
Canada began as a federal system in 1867 with four provinces – Ontario,
Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. There are now ten provinces and
three territories, following the establishment of the Nunavut Territory in
1999. Canada’s original Constitution of 1867 (and subsequent amendments)
describes the exclusive powers and responsibilities of the federal and provincial governments.1 The federal government has authority to legislate in the
areas of trade, commerce, defence, money and banking, and criminal law.
174 Tracy R. Snoddon
Residual powers are also assigned to the federal government. Both levels of
government can and do engage in redistribution, although the federal government has the dominant role in this regard. On the revenue side, all major tax
fields (with the exception of property taxes) are co-occupied by the federal and
provincial governments.
The fiscal powers of the common government for the EMU are, in comparison, quite limited. Since its powers are derived from its members, it has
only an indirect electoral and fiscal base. The European Union relies primarily
on transfers from its members. For 1998, roughly 16 per cent of EU resources
came from agricultural and customs duties while approximately 40 per cent
came from the VAT base and another 44 per cent from GNP-based contributions from members.2 Members and their respective governments have
authority for most areas of spending. In addition to monetary policy, the
common EU government has responsibility for agricultural policy, competition policy, the Structural and Cohesion Funds, and for overseeing fiscal
harmonization policies and monitoring members’ fiscal performance.
In Canada, the Constitution assigns exclusive responsibility for matters of a
local nature including health, welfare, and education to provincial governments. Owing to the decentralized nature of the Canadian federation and the
provinces’ constitutionally-derived powers, provinces are roughly on par with
member countries in the EMU. With few constraints, both provinces and
EMU members can levy taxes, determine spending priorities, incur deficits
and debts, and borrow on international markets.
Over time, the power of provincial governments has expanded as the
Canadian federation has become more decentralized. Figure 9.1 shows the
federal government’s share of combined federal and provincial revenues before
transfers to provinces and its share of combined expenditures after transfers
from 1961 to 1999. The federal government’s revenue share was 69 per cent in
1961. By the late 1970s, it fell to around 50 per cent where it has remained
fairly stable. The federal government’s expenditure share has followed a
similar pattern, falling from 61 per cent in 1961 to a relatively stable share of
45 per cent from 1970 to 1990. In contrast, the common EU government’s
share of revenues before intergovernmental transfers was 1.2 per cent in 1996.3
Several factors have contributed to the decentralization trend in Canada.
The tremendous growth in demand for health, education and social services,
all areas of exclusive provincial domain, has increased the expenditure position
of the provincial governments vis-à-vis the federal government. By necessity,
provincial governments have increased their revenue efforts. The increased use
of sales and excise taxes and a general increase in income taxes over time have
significantly bolstered the revenue position of the provinces.
Fiscal transfers
As is common with many federations, intergovernmental grants play an
important role in addressing the vertical and horizontal imbalances that arise
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 175
Figure 9.1 Federal revenue share before transfers and federal expenditure share after
transfers.
Source: data are from Finance Canada, Fiscal Reference Tables 2000 (Ottawa: Government of Canada,
2001) and Perry, David, Financing the Canadian Federation 1867 to 1995: Setting the Stage for Change
(Toronto, Canadian Foundation, 1997).
in federations with expenditure decentralization and centralized tax collection.
In Canada, the constitutional assignment of functions and responsibilities is
supplemented with an extensive system of intergovernmental fiscal arrangements that include federal grants to provinces, federal transfers to persons,
revenue guarantees, stabilization and statutory subsidies. In this section, fiscal
grants to governments are discussed. Transfers to persons and federal taxes are
also briefly examined.4
Grants
Federal grants to provinces are arguably one of the most significant, and
controversial, features of fiscal federalism in Canada. Grants are an important
provincial revenue source, accounting for roughly one-fifth of provincial
revenues. Table 9.1 shows the percentage of provincial revenue derived from
transfers for selected years. Two observations stand out. Large differences exist
in the extent to which provinces rely on grants and, for all provinces except
Manitoba, the importance of grants as a revenue source has declined over time.
There are two main types of grants to provinces. Stabilization payments to
provinces are explicitly aimed at stabilizing short run regional fluctuations.
176 Tracy R. Snoddon
Table 9.1 Federal cash transfers as a percentage of provincial revenue
Newfoundland
Prince Edward Island
Nova Scotia
New Brunswick
Quebec
Ontario
Manitoba
Saskatchewan
Alberta
British Columbia
Provincial/Territorial
1969–70
1990–91
1999–2000
54.8
55.1
45.9
43.2
21.8
16.1
27.0
24.9
17.1
15.0
21.6
47.1
44.1
40.5
39.6
20.8
13.4
36.2
32.0
16.7
14.7
20.7
43.8
39.3
37.2
38.6
13.4
9.4
32.6
20.6
8.1
11.9
14.9
Sources: Perry, David, Financing the Canadian Federation, 1867 to 1995: Setting the Stage for Change
(Toronto: Canadian Tax Foundation, 1997) and Finance Canada. Fiscal References Tables September
2000 (Ottawa, 2001).
Other federal grants to provinces help alleviate vertical and horizontal fiscal
imbalances. As such, these grants contribute greatly to interregional redistribution and are directly or indirectly targeted at long run economic disparities.
Canada’s stabilization programme dates back to 1957. The basic provisions
of the programme are designed to protect provinces from dramatic reductions
in revenues. Despite the existence of a formal programme, no stabilization
payments were made until the early 1980s when British Columbia received
the first payment. Since then, stabilization payments have been made to
Alberta, following the fall in the world price for oil, and to several provinces
as a result of the country-wide recession in 1990. Typically, stabilization
accounts for only a small fraction, roughly 1 to 2 per cent, of federal grants to
provinces.
Of the other fiscal transfers made to provinces, grants made in support of
provincial health, education and welfare spending and Canada’s equalization
programme are the most important. These grants account for roughly 80 per
cent of aggregate funds transferred to provinces. Equalization is the most
important unconditional grant, transferring revenues to provinces with low
revenue-generating capacity. Interprovincial redistribution is the explicit goal
of this grant.5 Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia do not receive equalization grants. Since these grants depend on provincial revenues relative to a
standard, equalization provides some short run stabilization for recipient
provinces. It is interesting to note that the three provinces that do not receive
equalization were among the first to qualify for stabilization. Conditional
grants to provinces have largely been in support of health, post-secondary
education and welfare. Prior to 1977, these grants were predominantly
matching but the federal government eventually abandoned matching grants
in favour of loosely conditional, block grants. Block grants are not designed to
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 177
tackle long run economic disparities or provide short run stabilization, although
indirectly they contribute to both functions.
Fiscal transfers play a much smaller role in the EMU, in part because of the
narrowly defined responsibilities of the common EU government and its
limited finances. While most grants in Canada are unconditional (or very
loosely conditional), grants in the EMU are one hundred per cent conditional.
For example, the Cohesion Fund provides infrastructure funds to members
that are significantly lagging behind. At present, Ireland, Greece, Spain and
Portugal receive these funds. These grants are designed to encourage capital
accumulation and must be matched with public and private funds. Cohesion
grants represent a sizeable fraction of GDP for these countries – ranging from
1.0 per cent of Spain’s GDP to 3.7 per cent of GDP in Greece for the period
from 1994 to 1999. In total, fiscal transfers accounted for less than 0.5 per
cent of EU-wide GDP in 1999.6 In contrast, grants accounted for about 3.5
per cent of Canada’s GDP in 1999.
Fiscal transfers to persons and federal taxes
Employment Insurance (EI) is the main federal transfer to persons in Canada.
There is a comparable EU-wide programme. During the 1970s, there was a
ramping up of the generosity of EI benefits. Since then, EI reform has been
aimed at reducing the generosity to bring it more in line with EI benefits in
the United States. This federal transfer contributes to regional stabilization in
two ways. More benefits are injected into a region experiencing a downturn
and payroll contributions from the region used to help finance benefits are
reduced. The regional extended benefits component of the programme also
injects additional funds into regions with relatively high unemployment rates
adding more stabilizing inflows.
By far the most important revenue source for the federal government is the
personal income tax (PIT). This tax acts as an automatic stabilizer, taking less
from individuals when incomes fall and more when incomes rise. Since the
federal PIT is a progressive tax and since federal grants are financed from the
federal government’s general revenues, the tax/grant combination involves an
additional element of interregional redistribution.
Fiscal rules
There are no formal equivalents in Canada to the convergence criteria and
fiscal rules used in the European Union. The Maastricht Treaty requires that
EU members reduce debt-to-GDP ratios to 60 per cent and deficit ratios to 3
per cent of GDP in order to participate in the EMU. The Stability and Growth
Pact (SGP), adopted in 1997, strengthens the membership criteria to include
the following fiscal rules: inflation must be no more than 1.5 percentage points
above inflation for the three best performing members; long-term interest
rates must be no more than 2 percentage points higher than the corresponding
178 Tracy R. Snoddon
figures for the three best performing members; and budget deficits must be
low, measured against a 3 per cent of GDP reference value. The SGP includes
provisions for monitoring members’ budget plans to ensure continued
compliance with the above-mentioned rules. Penalties are also specified in the
event that the 3 per cent reference deficit ratio is violated.
In Canada, several provinces have imposed fiscal rules pertaining to
balanced budgets and debt reduction. However, provincial fiscal policy,
including deficit and debt levels, is not restricted in any formal way by the
federal government.7
Tax harmonization
In a currency union where labour and capital are relatively mobile, the
decentralization of revenue powers and expenditure responsibilities can lead to
tax competition and economic distortions. Despite significant tax base overlap,
Canada is characterized by a comparatively high degree of tax harmonization.
This harmonization is accomplished through tax collection agreements between
the provinces and the federal government. Under these agreements, the
federal government administers, collects and enforces provincial personal and
corporate income tax systems at little or no charge to participating provinces.8
This system permits the realization of scale economies in tax collection and
administration. Since 1997, the harmonization of federal and provincial sales
taxes has also improved. At present, four of the nine provinces with retail sales
taxes have harmonized with the federal government’s sales tax – the Goods
and Services Tax (GST).9 The harmonized sales tax (known as the HST) is
centrally collected and administered at no charge to participating provinces.10
The European Union encourages tax co-ordination and harmonization but
progress has been slow and limited to indirect taxes like the VAT. Beginning
in 1977, the VAT was applied to a common base. Statutory VAT rates,
however, vary substantially across members. For example, in 1999, Luxembourg had the lowest rate of 15 per cent while Sweden and Denmark tied for
the highest rate of 25 per cent.11 Reduced rates, special exemptions and the
recently approved directive permitting a reduced VAT rate on labourintensive services together contribute to the large variation in VAT rates.
Little harmonization has been pursued with respect to business taxes except
with respect to double taxation and cross-border economic activity. The EMU
made a political commitment to a code of conduct for business taxation in
1997 in an effort to reduce harmful tax competition practices. At present,
labour and personal income taxes are not harmonized.
Regional adjustment: fiscal transfers vs. fiscal rules
In joining a currency union, members lose the exchange rate mechanism for
adjusting to differential shocks. As a consequence, the effectiveness (or ineffectiveness) of other avenues of adjustment, like labour mobility and local
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 179
price changes, becomes more critical. This section considers the advantages
and disadvantages of using fiscal rules and fiscal transfers to aid regional
adjustment and stabilize short run fluctuations. To begin, the evidence on
differential regional shocks is reviewed. Following this, the neo-classical
mechanisms for adjustment as well as other tools are evaluated.
Indicators of asymmetric shocks
Researchers have used a variety of techniques and data sets to investigate the
presence and significance of asymmetric regional shocks. Although the results
are mixed, there does appear to be evidence to support the existence and
persistence of differential shocks in the EU and in Canada.12 A common
method is to examine the level of dispersion in regional unemployment rates.
Reid and Snoddon (1992) adopt a somewhat different approach. The authors
use negative correlations of regional unemployment rates (relative to the
national rate) as a rudimentary measure of differences in the timing of
provincial cyclical fluctuations. Deviations in the regional rate from the
national rate permit an assessment of the relationship between provincial
cycles independent of economy-wide movements in unemployment. Table
9.2 updates Reid and Snoddon’s calculations using Canadian data for 1966 to
1999. Correlations are also given for two sub-periods, 1966 to 1981 and 1982
to 1999.
Strong negative correlations over the entire period are suggestive of the
presence of asymmetric shocks. The frequency of negative correlations is
higher, and the negative correlations are generally stronger, in the earlier
period. There are some exceptions. Ontario and British Columbia, for
example, show virtually no correlation in the first period but a strong negative
correlation in the latter period. In some cases, the sign of the correlations are
different in the two sub periods. New Brunswick has a strong negative
correlation with each of the four Western provinces from 1966 to 1981. From
1982 to 1999, the correlations, however, are positive. On the whole, the data
suggests that provinces do indeed experience asymmetric shocks but these
differential cyclical fluctuations may be less pronounced now than thirty or
forty years ago.
Regional adjustment
How effective are adjustments to these asymmetric shocks? In the very short
run, a negative shock generates high unemployment. Adjustment can be
achieved through labour mobility or local price changes (deflation and a
decline in real wages). Over the medium term, governments could undertake
discretionary fiscal policy and borrow to sustain expenditure levels. However,
a deficit-financing policy is unsustainable in the face of longer-term shocks.
Fiscal transfers from outside the region could help alleviate the costs of adjustment and provide a short run stabilization function. Alternatively, fiscal rules
180 Tracy R. Snoddon
Table 9.2 Correlations of deviations in provincial unemployment rates from the national
rate, 1966–99
Eastern provinces
Nfld PEI
Newfoundland
Prince Edward Island
Nova Scotia
New Brunswick
Quebec
1
0.731
0.462
0.363
1
NS
Western provinces
NB
Que
0.80 0.59 0.40
0.76 0.83 0.66
0.56 0.11 –0.56
0.73 0.33 0.43
0.76 0.57 0.67
0.25 –0.29 –0.13
1
0.61 0.46
0.84 0.71
0.20 –0.18
1
0.46
0.76
–0.20
1
Ontario
Manitoba
Saskatchewan
Alberta
Ont
Man Sask
Alb
BC
–0.31
0.09
–0.05
–0.14
0.05
–0.39
–0.30
0.17
–0.20
–0.57
0.02
–0.86
0.05
–0.23
0.42
1
–0.51
–0.89
–0.05
–0.17
–0.48
0.47
–0.38
–0.72
0.10
–0.36
–0.86
0.22
–0.47
–0.61
–0.29
–0.17
–0.21
–0.36
1
–0.13
–0.84
0.21
–0.13
–0.67
–0.20
–0.16
–0.85
0.25
–0.17
–0.90
0.55
–0.67
–0.82
–0.73
–0.64
–0.23
–0.85
0.54
0.87
0.48
0.65
0.80
0.61
1
–0.12
–0.53
–0.01
–0.39
–0.61
–0.67
–0.17
–0.72
0.01
0.25
–0.63
0.78
–0.48
–0.87
–0.38
–0.74
–0.02
–0.91
0.11
0.45
0.01
0.31
0.39
0.29
0.65
0.71
0.72
–0.18
–0.78
0.35
–0.10
–0.36
0.43
–0.07
–0.66
0.28
0.05
–0.68
0.55
–0.41
–0.46
–0.50
–0.53
–0.47
–0.60
0.71
0.79
0.73
1
Source: Statistics Canada’s CANSIM database.
Notes
1 Correlations for entire sample, 1966 to 1999 (bold).
2 Correlations for 1966 to 1981 (italics).
3 Correlations for 1982 to 1999 (normal).
can ensure that members of the currency union have sufficient fiscal room to
carry out discretionary fiscal policy.
Labour mobility and price adjustments
The evidence suggests that labour mobility and local price adjustment are
relatively sluggish in Canada and, perhaps even more so in the EMU.
Eichengreen (1993) and Obstfeld and Peri (1998) both find evidence of slow
labour market adjustment in Europe. There are few studies of the effectiveness
of regional price adjustments to differential shocks for Canada. The available
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 181
evidence suggests that the local price adjustment mechanism is also slow in
the two currency unions. Much of the existing work focuses on the United
States and on select European countries. Blanchard and Katz (1992) find that
relative wage and price movements play a minor role (in comparison to labour
mobility) in regional adjustment to labour demand shocks in the United
States. A comparative study of labour market adjustment in Canada and the
United States by Prasad and Thomas (1998) find that real wages are less
responsive to an employment growth shock in Canada. Obstfeld and Peri
(1998) find evidence of little or no price response in Canada and Italy while
Germany appears to have somewhat more responsive prices.
Discretionary fiscal policy
In theory, both provinces and EMU members have considerable latitude to
pursue their own stabilization policies using discretionary fiscal policy. Kneebone and McKenzie (1999) provide some evidence on the frequency and
relative magnitude of the discretionary fiscal policies of Canadian provinces
over the period 1962 to 1996.13 Their work shows that provinces use discretionary budget changes frequently and supports the hypothesis that the timing
of these discretionary fiscal impulses differs across provinces.
While EMU members have similar abilities to pursue discretionary fiscal
policy, data presented in Gramlich and Wood’s chapter suggests that the
incidence of discretionary fiscal policy, and in particular pro-cyclical fiscal
policy, in EMU countries has declined in the years since the Maastricht Treaty
was signed. Consider Belgium and Italy. Gramlich and Wood show a zero
correlation between changes in the output gap and changes in structural fiscal
surpluses for Italy in the post-Maastricht period. For Belgium, the correlation
is also low at 0.2. In fact, for most EMU members correlations are small after
1992. Spain and France are the exceptions with correlations of 0.92 and 0.55
respectively over the same period. These high correlations indicate substantial
counter-cyclical discretionary budget movements in these countries.
One of the motivations for the tight fiscal rules under Maastricht and the
subsequent convergence programs in the EMU is the belief that high and
persistent debt-to-GDP and deficit-to-GDP ratios restrict EMU members
from effectively managing their economic fluctuations. During the period of
transition to compliance, the fiscal rules themselves serve as an additional
constraint on discretionary fiscal policy. From 1993 to 1999, many EU
members were struggling to achieve compliance. Belgium and Italy, for
example, had debt-to-GDP ratios over 100 per cent in 1999, well in excess of
the 60 per cent Maastricht reference value. On the other hand, France and
Spain had basically satisfied the debt criteria by 2000.
To some extent this is a transition problem. After all EMU members have
achieved, or gone beyond, the stated fiscal criteria, these rules may prove not to
be overly restrictive. However, the transition to compliance is likely to last several
more years given how far some members are from the 60 per cent debt ratio.
182 Tracy R. Snoddon
While provinces in Canada are not subject to such union-wide fiscal rules,
some have self-imposed rules and all provinces are subject to external credit
market pressures that may constrain their ability to pursue discretionary fiscal
policy. Kneebone and Mckenzie (1999) find evidence of a reduced volatility in
discretionary fiscal policy in the Atlantic provinces at a time when these
provinces faced sizeable debt loads and rising interest rates. The authors
suggest that the high debt and debt servicing costs during this time provided
limited room for fiscal maneuvering and thus contributed to a reduced
volatility in discretionary fiscal policy.
External borrowing constraints appear to restrict provincial discretionary
fiscal policy, especially if provinces have limited fiscal room. The potential
disciplining effects of the external credit market are reflected in the fact that
almost every province’s credit rating was downgraded in the first half of the
1980s following the recession.14 Kneebone (1994) confirms the disciplining
effects of the credit market on provincial governments’ deficits and debts.
Cheung (1996) finds evidence that the higher a province’s debt-to-GDP ratio,
the higher the probability that the province’s credit rating will be downgraded. Figures 9.2 and 9.3 show the correlations in credit downgrades and
deficit-to-GDP and debt-to-GDP ratios for Newfoundland and Ontario.
Years in which credit downgrades/upgrades occur are indicated. In Ontario,
for example, successive credit downgrades in the early 1990s correspond to a
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1960 1963 1966 1969 1972 1975 1978 1981 1984 1987 1990 1993 1996 1999
DI – Canada – Market income per-capita (constant dollars)
DI – Canada – Personal disposable income per-capita (constant dollars)
DI – Canada – Market income plus transfers to provinces per-capita (constant dollars)
DI – EU15 – GDP per-capita (current dollars)
Figure 9.2 Income disparities in Canada and the EU15.
Source: Dispersion Indices for Canada calculated using data from Statistics Canada’s CANSIM
database. EU data obtained from European Commission’s ‘The EU Economy: 2000 Review’,
European Economy, No. 71 (Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the EC, 2000).
Deficit/GDP (%)
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 183
Figure 9.3a Canada: deficit to GDP ratios – high, low and average provinces.
Deficit/GDP (%)
Source: data are from Finance Canada, Fiscal Reference Tables 2000 (Ottawa: Government of Canada,
2001) and Statistics Canada’s CANSIM.
Figure 9.3b EU15: deficit to GDP ratios – high, low and average provinces.
Source: data are from European Commission’s Public Finances in the EMU 2000, Report of the
Directorate General for Economic and Financial Affairs, May 24.
period of a rising net debt-to-GDP ratio and large deficit-to-GDP-ratios. A
similar correlation between credit downgrades and debt and deficit ratios is
evident for Newfoundland.
So what happens if labour and price adjustment are limited and currency
union members are constrained (by fiscal rules, external market pressures, or
limited fiscal room) from pursing discretionary fiscal policy to provide short
run stabilization? In the EMU, the expectation is that once the transition to
compliance with the fiscal rules is complete EMU members will no longer be
constrained by limited fiscal room. In the event of extreme fluctuations, the
EMU may grant permission for short run deviations from the fiscal rules. In
Canada, fiscal transfers can help out to smooth out fluctuations when these
other avenues of adjustment are ineffective or constrained.
184 Tracy R. Snoddon
Fiscal transfers
Fiscal transfers, broadly defined to include taxes, transfers to persons and grants
to provinces, can provide a valuable short run stabilization. While Canada has
a long history with respect to fiscal transfers of this nature, they play a very
limited role in the European Union. Federal taxes work as an automatic
stabilizer, taking less from a region suffering an adverse shock and taking
more when economic times in the region improve. Transfers to persons, like
the federal government’s Employment Insurance programme (EI), also
contribute to stabilization by transferring income to unemployed individuals.
Moreover, the regional extended benefits component of EI results in an
injection of cash into regions with relatively high unemployment rates.
Canada’s stabilization programme is the only grant where stabilization is
the explicit goal. Other grants from the federal government to the provinces
may, however, contribute indirectly to short run stabilization. As noted previously, equalization grants provide a stabilizing inflow of funds depending
on the effects of the shocks on provincial revenue bases and on whether the
province receives equalization. Matching grants for welfare spending, from
1966 to 1996, were likely counter-cyclical and therefore stabilizing. Canada’s
current system of block grants for the health and post-secondary education
grants have small stabilizing components as a side effect of the peculiar way
these grants are calculated.
Distinguishing empirically between the overall contribution of fiscal
transfers to stabilization (and to redistribution) is a difficult task. Using data
for Canada, Bayoumi and Masson (1995), for example, estimate that the
redistributive effects of taxes, transfers to persons and grants to provinces
exceed the stabilization effects. For a one dollar shock, a total of 39 cents
would flow into a region for redistribution. Twenty-two cents of this inflow is
attributable to intergovernmental grants, while another 15 cents comes from
transfers to persons. Taxes contribute 2 cents of the $0.39. Fiscal flows to
provinces in response to a $1 income shock provide a stabilization offset equal
to 17 cents – with about 11 cents from transfers to persons and about 3 cents
each from taxes and from grants to provinces. Obstfeld and Peri (1998) find an
even larger redistributive effect of fiscal transfers for Canada. Moreover, their
results suggest a significant amount of persistence to these fiscal flows.
Regional adjustment: substitutability of fiscal rules and
fiscal transfers
The main purpose of this section is to investigate whether fiscal rules and
fiscal transfers are close substitutes for promoting regional economic adjustment to short run shocks. In principle, stabilizing fiscal transfers dampen
fluctuations within a province and therefore serve to reduce the need for
provincial counter-cyclical discretionary fiscal policy. On the other hand,
fiscal rules, like those in the EMU, help to ensure the viability of discretionary
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 185
fiscal policy when needed and eliminate the requirement for stabilizing fiscal
transfers. So, in this respect, the two instruments are substitutes.
Are there disadvantages to the ‘fiscal rules’ approach? There is some evidence
to suggest that the explicit fiscal rules in the EMU hamper discretionary fiscal
policy initiatives, at least during the time when EMU members are
attempting to readjust their fiscal policies to comply with the convergence
criteria. Short run stabilization transfers could be used in the EMU where
necessary to help adjust to shocks during this transition period. However, this
approach may be ill advised. Canada’s experience with fiscal transfers points to
some potential problems. Fiscal grants to provinces contribute little to short
run stabilization. Canada’s stabilization grants are very small relative to
provincial revenues or to the aggregate flow of grants and their effectiveness is
further limited by the time lags involved with paying out the claims and the
uncertainty regarding the amounts to be transferred.
For Canada, the empirical evidence suggests that the bulk of the short run
stabilization actually comes from fiscal transfers to persons (mainly Employment Insurance benefits) and not grants. Fiscal inflows for EI can be in
response to a temporary increase in a region’s unemployment rate (and therefore
stabilizing) but can also be generated by persistently high unemployment rates.
In this case, these transfers take on a redistributive rather than a short run
stabilization function. Day and Winer (1994) conclude from the empirical
literature that EI interferes with labour mobility and therefore reduces even
further the effectiveness of an already sluggish labour adjustment mechanism.
At present, the EMU is likely to face serious obstacles to building a consensus
on stabilizing transfers. Financing these transfers would put considerable
strain on the limited resources of the common EU government. While EMU
members may suffer from a reduced ability to manage their economic fluctuations in the short run, in the longer term the stage should be set for the
effective management of these fluctuations in the future. To provide more
room for discretionary fiscal policy during the transition period, the EMU
could permit deviations from the fiscal rules when shocks are particularly
acute. For smaller shocks, is seems reasonable to be optimistic that the fiscal
rules approach will help members to manage their own fluctuations. Under
these circumstances, the fiscal rules approach is better suited to promoting
regional adjustment in the EMU.
Economic convergence: fiscal rules vs. fiscal transfers
Economic disparities among currency union members have given rise to
different responses in the EMU and in Canada. Disparities in Canada are
addressed primarily through the operation of Canada’s model of fiscal
federalism. Redistributive fiscal transfers are motivated by interregional
equity considerations and regional disparities. In contrast, the EMU focuses
on fiscal harmonization to encourage economic convergence. The fiscal rules
set out in the convergence programmes, and later in the SGP, were selected
186 Tracy R. Snoddon
with two key issues in mind: a reduction in economic divergences between
members (and potential members); and, the enhancement of economic and
social cohesion in the Union. Fiscal transfers to members are used, to an lesser
extent, to promote convergence. Are these approaches close substitutes for
promoting long run economic convergence?
Income convergence in Canada and the EMU
Income measures and other economic indicators like labour productivity,
unemployment or output are commonly measures of economic disparity.
Alternatively, dispersion in human and physical capital may be of interest
when evaluating the speed of convergence in output or income-based disparity
measures. A number of studies, like Helliwell (1994), Coulombe (1999), and
Coulombe and Lee (1993), find evidence of convergence in Canada using both
income and output-based measures. For the European Union, the results in
Canova and Marecet (1995) suggest rapid convergence for nine EU regions.
This contrasts with earlier evidence of convergence at very slow rates.15 More
recently, Tondl (1999) conducted an empirical analysis of convergence for all
regions in the EU15 over the period 1960–94. Her results confirm convergence over time and across regions but convergence rates are found to differ
depending on the time period examined. So although a substantial literature
on convergence has developed, the empirical results have thus far failed to
generate a broad consensus.
To gain a flavour for broad trends in economic disparities in the European
Union and in Canada, this section presents some data on income dispersion
across Canadian provinces and for the Union. To measure whether provincial
income per-capita in Canada (expressed as a percentage of the national
average) is converging, a dispersion index is calculated using three different
income measures for the period from 1961 to 1996.16 The first index uses real
per-capita market income to capture income before taxes and transfers.17 To
illustrate the redistributive effect of the tax/transfer system, a second dispersion index is calculated using real personal disposable income, defined as
market income after provincial and federal taxes and transfers. Finally, a third
dispersion index is calculated based on real market income inclusive of federal
grants to provinces. This measure illustrates the direct impact of federal
grants to provinces on regional income convergence. Income dispersion in the
EU15 is calculated using data on current GDP per capita relative to the EU15
average from 1960 to 2000.18
These dispersion indices are shown in Figure 9.2. Although the income
measures are not directly comparable, the convergence trends differ in Canada
and the EU15, especially since 1980. For Canada, the data suggest convergence
for all three income measures. Dispersion in per capita GDP in the European
Union declines from 1960 to 1980. Over the last twenty years, however,
dispersion increases. There is no noticeable decline in per-capita GDP
disparity from 1993 to 2000, the period over which the Maastricht fiscal rules
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 187
were in place and the first Cohesion transfers were made. Overall, disparity
appears lower in Canada than in the European Union. Part of this difference is
attributable to somewhat greater labour mobility and a higher degree of tax
harmonization, especially with respect to corporate income taxes, in Canada.
How do fiscal transfers in Canada contribute to income convergence? Fiscal
transfers redistribute income and therefore lower the dispersion in a given
year. Transfers can also improve the allocation of resources across provinces by
encouraging capital accumulation, for example, or by improving the
efficiency of job search. In this way, fiscal transfers contribute indirectly to the
convergence of market income over time.
Work by Coulombe and Lee (1996) and Coulombe (1999) maintain that,
for Canada, the contribution of federal grants to convergence in market
income has reached its limits. Coulombe (1999) argues that, prior to 1978,
convergence in market income was enhanced by federal grants to provinces,
especially grants in support of post-secondary education. Fiscal transfers
helped to speed up the accumulation of human capital and contributed to the
convergence process. Coulombe attributes the persistence in the high level of
regional disparities and lack of convergence in market income after 1977 to
unfavorable linkages between productivity, unemployment rates and labour
force participation rates, which he argues are strongly influenced by Canada’s
system of interregional redistribution. Individuals remain in low productivity
regions, not participating or working in the labour force, because of fiscal
inflows (Employment Insurance benefits as well as grants to provinces).19
It is interesting to note that education grants to provinces in this period
were loosely conditional, block grants, independent of the level of provincial
spending. Relative to the matching grants for post-secondary education that
were in place prior to 1977, block grants do not lower the local price of
education spending. In their review of the available empirical evidence, Day
and Winer (1994) confirm that Employment Insurance deters labour mobility
and interferes with the efficient allocation of labour. Evidence on a detrimental effect of intergovernmental grants is, however, so far inconclusive.
Over the period from 1993 to 2000, many EMU members were struggling
to comply with established fiscal rules. For some members, compliance was
difficult and costly. Since these rules aim to better position members to
achieve convergence and convergence is a long run process, it is too soon to
determine the impact of these fiscal rules on long run economic disparities.
Pereira (1999), however, provides some evidence on the effects of fiscal transfers on output convergence in the European Union. He finds that cohesion
grants for the period 1994 to 1999 improve per-capita GDP for the four
recipient countries. Despite these gains, these countries will continue to lag
well behind the EU average. His results suggest that economic convergence is
enhanced in a very limited way by fiscal transfers. While tighter matching
conditions are essential to improving the contribution of grant programmes to
convergence, Pereira advocates that structural changes in lagging economies
offer greater potential for achieving real convergence.
188 Tracy R. Snoddon
Fiscal convergence
The fiscal rules in the EMU are directed at convergence in broad fiscal
aggregates like the deficit-to-GDP and debt-to-GDP ratios, inflation and
interest rates. According to the EMU, fiscal convergence is a precondition for
economic convergence and greater social cohesion. Apart from Canada’s tax
collection agreements covering sales and income taxes, there are no formal
criteria to promote fiscal convergence across provinces. Fiscal transfers may,
however, contribute indirectly to fiscal convergence. Equalization, in particular, is aimed at revenue convergence, ensuring a certain standard of revenue for
7 of 10 provinces. The federal government could manipulate fiscal grants to
provinces with the goal of promoting fiscal restraint in certain provinces.
There are a number of political drawbacks from this approach and it is of
limited use for provinces that receive only a small share of revenue from grants.
There are other factors that may encourage fiscal convergence. External
borrowing constraints may help to cap deficit-to-GDP and debt-to-GDP ratios.
Footloose voters, labourers and firms may desire a degree of fiscal convergence.
For example, voters may favour minimum standards for a public service, like
health care, which indirectly contributes to fiscal convergence.
Of primary interest, is whether Canada’s fiscal transfers and the EMU’s
fiscal rules are substitutes for achieving convergence in broad fiscal
aggregates. Figure 9.3a shows the average provincial deficit as a percentage of
GDP and indicates the high and low values for each year over the period 1981
to 1999. Figure 9.3b displays a similar graph for members of the EU15 for
1980 to 2000. A similar pattern of a fluctuating, and then declining, average
deficit ratio is evident in both figures. Moreover, the downturn in the average
deficit ratio occurs roughly at the same time in Canada and the EU15. While
this is not surprising for the European Union, since it coincides with the
introduction of the Maastricht Treaty’s deficit and debt criteria, a similar
decline in Canada is notably because of the absence of such fiscal rules.
As expected, the difference between the high and low deficit ratio has also
declined in the EU15 since 1995. In Canada, dispersion falls slightly over the
period from 1989 to 1993. Unlike the experience in the European Union,
dispersion increases again after 1993.
The similar experience in the two currency unions with respect to the
average deficit-to-GDP ratio, in spite of the lack of explicit fiscal rules in
Canada, suggests that, at least in Canada, other forces are at work. Credit
market discipline, fiscal transfers, voter preferences, and a shift in fiscal
priorities may be partly responsible for the decline in the average provincial
deficit ratio. Fiscal convergence in the European Union may also be influenced
by these factors. This leaves the question of how much of the fiscal convergence in the Union can be attributed to fiscal rules and to other factors.
As an aside, it is interesting to consider other indicators of fiscal convergence. For example, revenue equalization in Canada ensures a degree of revenue
harmonization. Has this encouraged expenditure convergence? Figure 9.4
shows a dispersion index for Canada and for the EU15 based on the share of
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 189
35.0
30.0
25.0
20.0
15.0
10.0
1980 1985 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
EU15
Canada
Figure 9.4 Dispersion in general government consumption expenditures (% of GDP).
Source: data for Canada are from Statistics Canada’s CANSIM database. For the EU, the data are
taken from European Commission’s Public Finances in the EMU 2000, Report of the Directorate
General for Economic and Financial Affairs, May 24.
government spending in regional GDP to illuminate broad trends in differences in government presence in regional economies.20 This approach does not
isolate the determinants of changes in dispersion or determine the contribution of fiscal rules or transfers to the process, but does provide an indication of
whether expenditure convergence has occurred in Canada or the EMU.21
Overall, the evidence does not support the idea of expenditure convergence
in terms of the relative size of government in the economy in recent years in
Canada or the European Union. Dispersion in provincial governments’ shares
of GDP declined from 1981 to 1990. Since then dispersion has increased.
Expenditure convergence in Canada over the period from 1989 to 1992
roughly corresponds with the reduction in dispersion in provincial deficit-toGDP ratios. For the EU15, dispersion is fairly stable over the mid-1980s to
1995, falls between 1994 and 1996, and increases after 1996.
Convergence: substitutability between fiscal rules and
fiscal transfers
The data on deficit convergence are consistent with what we would expect,
given the EMU’s fiscal rules. If fiscal rules generate this type of fiscal
convergence and fiscal convergence is viewed as a precondition for long run
economic convergence, then while the stage may be set, the data does not yet
show evidence of an improvement in long run economic convergence in the
European Union. Another five to ten years of data will prove useful in our
attempts to measure the contribution of these fiscal rules to economic convergence. And while fiscal transfers in the EMU have contributed to convergence
for those EU countries that lag the most, the overall impact is minor.
190 Tracy R. Snoddon
For Canada, the evidence suggests that fiscal transfers to provinces contribute to income convergence but there may be a point at which additional
transfers fail to promote efficient resource allocation and simply redistribute
income. A stronger consensus exists in the literature regarding fiscal transfers
to persons and, in particular, EI benefits. While these transfers help stabilize
short run fluctuations, they also respond to unemployment rates that are
persistently higher than average. As a result, these fiscal transfers can interfere
with the efficient movement of labour.
A final word on fiscal grants. The evidence, such as it is, points in the
direction of matching grants with strict conditions, limited perhaps to
infrastructure and physical and capital accumulation. This is more or less the
approach the EMU has taken with grants to member countries. In Canada,
there has been a definitive move away from open-ended matching grants. The
federal government in Canada disliked these grants because they were
expensive and unpredictable. In the new era of fiscal responsibility, these
grants were hard to budget for and since control over how the funds were spent
rested primarily with the provinces, the federal government argued there was
a lack of accountability to the taxpayers. It seems unlikely that these issues
would be any less severe in the European Union. In fact, the limited budget of
the Union makes alternatives involving anything but a small expansion of
these fiscal grants, unattractive.
Conclusion
This chapter investigates the different fiscal institutions that Canada and the
EMU use to support their respective currency unions. In particular, the
contributions of fiscal transfers in Canada and fiscal rules in the EMU to
regional adjustment and long run economic convergence are examined. With
respect to regional adjustment and stabilization in the face of country-specific
shocks, fiscal rules reduce the need for stabilizing transfers. Fiscal transfers, on
the other hand, reduce the level of stabilization required via regional discretionary fiscal policy. In Canada, interregional transfers or grants play a key
role in redistributing income across regions and in reducing regional
disparities. By encouraging fiscal convergence, the fiscal rules approach hopes
to reduce economic disparities. If successful, fiscal rules act as a substitute for
redistributive fiscal transfers.
The EMU’s experience with fiscal rules to date suggests some potential
problems. For example, fiscal rules may hamper the ability of members to
pursue discretionary fiscal policy during periods of extreme shocks or when
members are struggling to achieve or maintain compliance. While divergence
in deficit and debt-to-GDP ratios has been reduced, there is little evidence as
of yet to suggest that fiscal convergence transfers into greater economic
convergence. Given the adjustments necessary in some countries to comply
with the fiscal rules it may take several years for any positive effects on convergence to show up in the data. These problems may not be serious enough to
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 191
warrant a switch to other tools, like stabilizing or redistributive fiscal transfers. Moreover, circumstances in the EMU suggest that fiscal transfers are not
a desirable or viable option in the near term.
Canada’s experience with fiscal transfers for stabilization and for economic
convergence demonstrates some potential difficulties with this approach.
Despite the existence of a formal stabilization programme as well as a number
of fiscal transfers with stabilizing properties, fiscal transfers in Canada are
shown to have a relatively small stabilization effect. Part of the failure of these
transfers to provide short run stabilization is related to the uncertainty with
respect to the size and timing of stabilization and equalization grants. Fiscal
transfers frequently respond not only to short run shocks but also to persistent
conditions. This in turn generates persistence in the fiscal transfers so that they
act more as tools for ongoing redistribution rather than short run stabilization. Other fiscal transfers impede, or are suspected of impeding, efficient
labour adjustment.
While fiscal transfers can contribute positively to convergence in income
disparities by encouraging human capital accumulation and perhaps infrastructure investment in poor regions, the evidence for Canada hints that the
influence of grants on regional convergence has reached its limits. Moreover,
fiscal transfers may actually discourage factor mobility, as is the case with
Employment Insurance, and lucrative fiscal grants may weaken the incentives
of provincial governments to realign their finances.
There are some strong positive lessons from the Canadian experience. Tax
harmonization is quite successful and more advanced in Canada. Canada’s
formal stabilization programme satisfies the goal of providing short run stabilization. Equalization serves, albeit imperfectly, a similar purpose. Canada’s
experience suggests, however, that programme design is critical if such
problems like unintended redistribution are to be minimized. Practical implementation issues relating to unpredictable payments and time lags must also
be addressed if the effectiveness of fiscal transfers is to be improved.
Notes
1 Territorial governments are not on par with sovereign provincial governments
since their powers are not formally recognized in the Constitution.
2 European Commission, Financing the European Union: Commission Report on the
Operations of the Own Resources System, Directorate General 29, Budgets, Resources,
Brussels, 7 October 1998.
3 Watts, Ronald. Comparing Federal Systems. (Kingston: Institute of Intergovernmental Relations, Queen’s University, 1999).
4 The federal government is also involved in a wide variety of fiscal transfers directly
to persons. Some of these federal programmes, in particular the Employment
Insurance Program, have a significant, interregional redistributive component.
5 Section 36 (2) of the Constitution Act 1982 commits the federal government to
the principle of equalization and to ensuring that provincial governments can
provide reasonably comparable levels of public services at reasonably comparable
levels of taxation.
192 Tracy R. Snoddon
6 European Communities. European Union Financial Report 1999. (Luxembourg:
Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 2000) and
European Commission. “The EU Economy: 2000 Review’, European Economy, No.
71 (Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the EC, 2000).
7 Some very loose ‘rules’ do, however apply. For example, provincial health care
spending must satisfy a set of federally-defined principles in order for provinces to
receive health care grants. However, whether these conditions actually constrain
provinces in any way is debatable.
8 Quebec does not participate in the tax agreement for personal or corporate income
taxes. Alberta and Ontario do not participate in the agreements for corporate
income taxes. In the case of non-participation, the provinces collect and administer
their own tax systems.
9 The GST is a value-added type tax levied at a rate of 7 per cent and introduced in
1991 to replace the federal government’s former sales tax imposed on
manufactured goods.
10 Recent tax reforms, introduced in 1998 and 2000, have however opened the door
for significant changes in tax harmonization.
11 European Commission. Tax Policy in the European Union (Luxembourg: Office for
Official Publications of the European Communities, 2000).
12 For the European Union, see Vinals and Jimeno (1996) and Forni and Reichlin
(1997). Recent research by Hallet (2000), however, suggests that the probability
of differential regional shocks for the European Union may be lower in the future
on account of strong convergence in sectoral composition across EU regions. For
Canada, see Coulombe (1999).
13 The effects of automatic stabilizers are netted out to focus on discretionary changes
in provincial budgets.
14 Credit ratings, like those provided by Standard and Poor, are an assessment of the
likelihood of default on loan payments and are believed to influence the cost of
borrowing and the availability of credit.
15 European Commission (2000) ‘The EU Economy: 2000 Review’, European
Economy, No. 71 (Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European
Community).
16 The dispersion index is calculated as the standard deviation divided by the mean
and is also known as the coefficient of variation.
17 To arrive at real market income per-capita (in 1992 dollars), provincial net
domestic product is divided by provincial population and then deflated by the
national GDP deflator. Personal disposable income is defined as market income
plus transfers and minus taxes and payroll contributions. All data are taken from
Statistic Canada’s CANSIM database.
18 The dispersion index for the EU15 is based on data from Annex Table 9 of the
European Commission’s ‘The EU Economy: 2000 Review’, European Economy, No.
71 (Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Community,
2000).
19 Courchene (1978, 1981) made similar arguments more than two decades ago.
20 Provincial expenditures on current goods and services are used as the indictor of
programme spending.
21 Recent work suggests that governments are becoming more similar in terms of the
shares of their budgets (or of GDP) devoted to particular types of government
spending. Atkinson and Bierling (1998) find that provinces are becoming more
alike in terms of the relative importance of health care spending in the budget.
Nixon (1999) also finds evidence of convergence in health care expenditure for
members of the EU15.
Fiscal institutions, regional adjustment and convergence in Canada 193
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Index
Abbreviations: EMU = Economic and Monetary Union; EU = European Union;
Fig = Figure; Tab = Table; USA = United States of America
Agenda 2000 Report (European
Commission) 80, 106; see also
European Commission
Australia: access to public services
(‘equity goal’) 137, 151;
centralization of tax powers 137–9;
changes in revenue/expenditure
1901–98 138 Tab 7.1; creation 137;
efficiency effects of equalization
transfers 149–50; equalization
formulae for unconditional transfers
147–8; ‘fiscal cartel’ thesis 143–4;
Goods and Services Tax (GST)
142–3; horizontal fiscal equalization
149 Tab 7.3; loss of state autonomy
146–7; parliamentary system 147;
sources of tax revenue 141 Tab 7.2;
specific purchase payments 142;
state/central borrowing policy
144–6; state expenditure 140; state
fiscal autonomy 140–2; tax levying
powers 139–40; unconditional
transfers to states 147–51
Banking Supervision Committee (ECB)
131; see also European Central Bank
Banks see European Central Bank;
national central banks
Brandeis, L., quote 24
Break, G., quote 27
budget balances of EU countries 58 Tab
2.1; cyclically adjusted 61 Tab 2.3;
excluding interest 59 Tab 2.2
budget deficits: EMU member countries
55; EU countries 55–6, 90
budgets see European Union Budget;
federal budgets, functions; national
budgets
Canada 172–3; asymmetric regional
shocks 179; creation 173;
decentralization 174; deficit to GDP
ratios 183 Fig 9.3a; discretional fiscal
policy of provinces 181; dispersion in
general government consumption
expenditure 189 Fig 9.4;
Employment Insurance 177, 184–5;
external borrowing constraints 182;
federal expenditure share before
transfers 175 Fig 9.1; federal revenue
share before transfers 175 Fig 9.1;
fiscal convergence 188–91; fiscal
powers of government tiers 173–4;
income convergence 186–7; income
disparities 182 Fig 9.2; income tax
177; intergovernmental grants
174–7, 184, 190–1; labour mobility
180–1; provincial unemployment
rates 180 Tab 9.2; regional price
adjustments 180–1; restriction of
provincial fiscal policy 178; tax
harmonization 178
capital tax rates in EU countries
123–4
centralized budget, use of to stabilize tax
base 2–3
196 Index
Chesapeake Bay management 23; see also
United States of America
Cohesion Fund 75, 81, 121, 177
Common Agricultural Policy 72, 74,
85, 121
Commonwealth Grants Commission
137; see also Australia
competition policy within EU 122
conditional intergovernmental grants
19; see also intergovernmental grants
consumption tax rates in EU countries
123–4
currency unions see Canada; Economic
and Monetary Union (EMU)
debt: Australian state/central borrowing
policy 144–6; EU countries
government consolidated 62 Tab 2.4;
financing of by decentralized
governments 32
Decentralization Theorem 15–17
decentralized government: advantages
161; Canada 174; debt finance 32;
experimental reform 24–6; increase
in citizen influence 30–1;
inter-jurisdictional competition
26–30; local taxation 18–19;
provision of goods and services
14–15; role of exit 160–3;
Switzerland 161–6; see also fiscal
decentralization; sub-national
governments
Delors packages 71, 79
democracies: fiscal discipline 48–9;
options for fiscal restraint 49–50
developing countries: fiscal
centralization 34–5; fiscal reform
37–8; fiscal structure 35–6
domestic policy, link with foreign policy
50–1
Economic and Finance Council of
European Union (ECOFIN) 55–6, 89
economic lobbying by special interest
groups 48–9
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU):
advantages/disadvantages of fiscal
rules 185; convergence criteria 53–4,
63–4, 120, 172, 177–8, 181; deficit
to GDP ratios 183 Fig 9.3b;
discretionary fiscal policy of members
181; dispersion in general
government consumption
expenditure 189 Fig 9.4; fiscal
convergence 188–91; fiscal discipline
post-joining 56–7, 57–60, 63–4;
fiscal powers 174; fiscal transfers
177, 184–5; inclusion of all EU
member states 120; income
convergence 186–7, 189; income
disparities 182 Fig 9.2; interregional
redistribution 94–6; interregional
stabilization problems 93, 96; labour
mobility 180–1; monetary policy
130–1; monetary policy
responsibility 172; political economy
52–3; problems caused by EU
Budget size 89–91; regional price
adjustment 180–1; sanctions 56;
stability programmes of member
countries 55, 60–3, 120
environmental quality, reduction in
27–30
European Agricultural Guidance Fund
(EAGGF) 72–3
European Central Bank 172; Banking
Supervision Committee 131;
monetary policy 130–1
European Commission 120; Agenda
2000 Report 80, 106;
competition policy 122
European Development Fund (EDF) 69
European Investment Fund 70
European Parliament 120; EU Budget
rejection rights 78
European Regional Development Fund
(ERDF) 73–4
European Social Fund 73–4
European System of Central Banks,
setting of EU monetary policy 120
European Union: assignment of
stabilization responsibility 105–7;
competition policy 122; countries
waiting to join 80–1; differential
fiscal policy of member states 126–7;
enlargement 80–1; fiscal discipline
50, 56–7; fiscal federalism 119;
harmonization of tax systems 122,
Index
197
178; inter-state equalization transfers
151; labour mobility 108–9; labour
specialization 109–10; membership
criteria 80; monetary policy 120,
130–1; planning for differential
shocks 124–9; principle of delegation
51; revenue sources 86 Tab 4.1, 174;
spending policy 121–2; structure
119–20; support for 53; terminology
of fiscal federalism 103–4
European Union Budget 69, 83;
balanced budget rules 105; basic
principles 85; budgetary reforms
78–80; budgetary transfers 76–8;
comparison with national budgets
85–9; differences from national
budgets 85, 88–9; expenditure 72–3,
87–8; expenditure headings 79;
funding for new EU member
countries 80–1; key features 69–70;
problems for Euro area stabilization
89–91, 95–6; refusal of Agenda 2000
to increase 106; revenue 70–2, 85–7,
178; right of European Parliament to
reject 79; see also federal budgets,
functions; national budgets
European Union countries: budget
balances 58–9, 61; budget deficits
55–6; changes in output gaps and
fiscal surpluses, correlations 129 Tab
6.3; gross debt 62 Tab 2.4;
interregional stabilization 92–3;
projected reduction in fiscal deficits
127–8; tax rates 123 Tab 6.1
European Union Economic and
Financial Committee (EFC) 55–6
Eurosystem 130–1
Excessive Deficit Procedure 55–6, 89,
127; see also Stability and Growth
Pact
expenditure areas of EU Budget 72–3,
87–8; 1997–99 percentages 88 Tab
4.3
external shocks, use of central fiscal
system to stabilize 2
federalism, definition 155
Financial Instrument for Fisheries
Guidance 73
fiscal centralization in developing
countries 34–5; see also developing
countries
fiscal decentralization 13–14;
Decentralization Theorem 15–16;
developing countries 34–5;
industrialized countries 35, 38–9;
potential to improve economic
performance 36; role in constraining
public sector growth 33–4; welfare
gains 16–17; welfare reform in USA
24, 26; see also decentralized
government
fiscal discipline in democracies 48–9;
options available 49–50
fiscal discipline in EMU countries 56–7,
57–60, 63–4; see also Economic and
Monetary Union (EMU)
fiscal equalization 19–20
fiscal federalism 1; advantages 2–3;
assignment of fiscal functions 107;
basic theory 14; criticisms 4–5;
European economic integration 119;
political objectives 30–1;
terminology 103–4
fiscal instruments: intergovernmental
grants 19–22; stabilization 106–7;
taxation 17–19
fiscal policy: criticisms 4–5; developing
countries 36–8; differential policies
in EU countries 126–7; federal
budgets 83–5; spending policies
121–2
fiscal tiers 103–5
‘fly-paper effect’ 21–2; see also
intergovernmental grants
Fontagné, L., quote 110
Fontainebleau Summit (1984) 77,
79
foreign policy, link with domestic policy
50–1
Freudenberg, M., quote 110
federal budgets, functions 83–5; see also
European Union Budget; national
budgets
Germany, EU budgetary transfers 76–8
Goods and Services Tax (GST): Australia
142–3; Canada 178
198 Index
Governing Council of ECB 130; see also
European Central Bank
grants see intergovernmental grants
Greece: matching funding for EU
structural funds 76; reform of public
finances 56
gross national product as percentage of
EU revenue source 86
industrialized countries, fiscal
decentralization 35, 38–9
intergovernmental grants: cuts in,
response to 22; conditional 19; fiscal
equalization 19–20; matching grants
21–2; response to 21–2; role in tax
system 20–1; unconditional 19; use
of in fiscal difficulties 32; within
Canada 172, 174–7, 184, 190–1;
within Switzerland 158–60
Interinstitutional Agreement 79–80;
see also European Union Budget
inter-jurisdictional competition 26–30,
162; see also jurisdictional boundaries
international agreement on national
fiscal discipline 52–3
international commitments of national
powers, use as diversion from
domestic problems 50–1
interregional redistribution within
EMU 94–6; see also Economic and
Monetary Union (EMU)
interregional stabilization: EMU
countries 93, 96; EU countries 92–3;
USA 91–2
jurisdictional boundaries 22–4; see also
inter-jurisdictional competition
laboratory federalism 24–6
labour mobility 108–9, 124; Canada
180–1; migration from poor to rich
states within EU 151, 180–1;
migration within Switzerland 160–3
labour specialization 109–10
labour tax rates in EU countries 123–4
legislation for fiscal restraint 49
Leviathan hypothesis 160–1
Loan Council, The (Australia) 145–6; see
also Australia
Luxembourg Agreements (1970) 70,
78–9; see also European Union
Budget
Maastricht Treaty on European Union
(1991) 3–4, 126; conditions for
adoption of common currency 120,
177; effect on fiscal policies since
1992 57–60; parliamentary
acceptance 52; principle of
subsidiarity 27; provisions for EMU
53–4
MacDougall Report (1977) 74, 91, 106
market-preserving federalism 31–4
matching grants 21–2; see also
intergovernmental grants
Monthly Bulletin (European Central
Bank) 130–1; see also European
Central Bank
national budgets 73; balanced budget
rules 105–7, 113; comparison with
EU Budget 85–9; decrease in deficits
57–60; difference from EU Budget
85, 88–9; expenditure 87–8;
expenditure by function 1997 88
Tab 4.4; expenditure by level of
government 1997 89 Tab 4.5;
stabilization of Eurozone 110–14;
total revenue 1997 87 Tab 4.2; see
also European Union Budget; federal
budgets, functions
national central banks 130–1
national fiscal policy, undermining by
reduction in tax seignorage 4
national governments: assignment of
fiscal functions 105–7; fiscal policy
of EU countries 127–9; reduction in
importance due to increase in EU
service provision 122
Oates, W. E., quote 103
optimum currency areas 107; labour
mobility 108–9
overview of text 5–7
Ozone Transport Region (USA) 23;
see also United States of America
political objectives of fiscal federalism
Index
30–1
political systems: checks and balances
155; negative economic effects 48–9
Protocol on the Convergence Criteria
(PCC) 53–4; see also Maastricht
Treaty on European Union (1991)
public sector institutions, controlling
size of 33–4
public sector restructuring 13
public services: access to in Australia
137, 151; effect of interjurisdictional competition on 26–30,
162
‘race to the bottom’ (inter-jurisdictional
competition) 26–30, 162
redistribution of resources 3
regional aid, EU regions 73
regional stabilization schemes 94–5
regional transfers in federal budgets
83–5; Australia 147–50; Canada
174–7, 184, 190–1; Switzerland
158–60
revenue sources for EU Budget 70–2,
85–7, 178; 1997–99 86 Tab 4.1
seigniorage tax revenue, effect on
national fiscal policy of reduction
in 4
special interest groups, economic
lobbying 48–9
specific purpose payments (Australia)
142; see also Australia
spending policies 121–2; see also fiscal
policy
Stability and Growth Pact 3–4, 52;
collective surveillance mechanism 55,
89–90; disciplining effect on fiscal
policy 60, 63–4; effect on
stabilization 112–13; EMU
membership criteria 177–8;
Excessive Deficit Procedure 55–6,
90, 127; fiscal discipline post-EMU
56–7; main economic aim 54, 120
stability programmes of EMU member
countries 55, 60–3, 120; 2000–02
projections 128 Tab 6.2; monitoring
120–1
stabilization of Eurozone: assignment of
199
responsibility to EU 105–7; by use of
national budgets 110–14; failures of
EU Budget 88–91; interregional
redistribution 94–6; interregional
stabilization problems 93, 96;
terminology applicable to EU 103–4
stabilization of national economies 106–
7; effect of Stability and Growth Pact
112–13
Structural Funds 69, 121; effects of
75–6; expenditure 74; matching
funding 75; objectives 74; reform
of 74
sub-national governments: budget
balancing rules 105; spending
policies 121; see also decentralized
government
subsidiarity concept 27, 104; historical
aspect 155
Switzerland 155–6, 167–8; advantages
of size of jurisdictions 162;
democracy index 157–8, 158 Fig 8.1;
direct democracy 163–5; effect of
fragmentation on Government
behaviour 160–2; exit option 160–3,
167; fiscal autonomy of sub-level
government 160–1; government tiers
156; impact of federalism on
economic policy 166 Tab 8.4;
initiatives 156–7; intergovernmental
transfers 158–60; lack of fiscal
equivalence 162; referenda 156–7;
revenue by government tier 159 Tab
9.2; share of federal aid by Canton
159 Tab 9.3; structure of public
revenue 1950–97 157 Tab 8.1;
subjective well-being of Swiss people
165; tax harmonization 162; tax
morale 165; tax raising powers
156–7; voter loyalty 165
tax systems: Australia 137–40;
harmonization of in Canada 178;
harmonization of in EU 122, 178;
harmonization of in Switzerland 162;
role of intergovernmental grants 20–1
taxation: Australia 139–42; by
decentralized government 17–19;
Canada 177; Switzerland 156–8; tax
200 Index
rates in EU countries 123 Tab 6.1
Taylor Rule (short term interest rates)
125 Tab 7.1
Tiebout model 16–18, 160
Tocqueville, Alexis de, quotes 13, 38
Trans-European Networks (TENS) 72
Treaty on the European Community
(TEC), criteria for joining EMU
53–4; see also Economic and
Monetary Union (EMU)
unconditional intergovernmental grants
19; see also intergovernmental grants
unemployment, Canadian provinces
1966–99 180 Tab 9.2
United Kingdom, EU budgetary
transfers 76–8
United States of America: budget limits
105; interregional insurance 111;
interregional transfers 91–2;
jurisdictional boundaries 23;
labour mobility 108–9; Ozone
Transport Region 23; welfare reform
24, 26
Value Added Tax (VAT): rates in EU
countries 123 Tab 6.1; revenue for
EU Budget 71–2, 85, 178
‘veil hypothesis’ 21; see also
intergovernmental grants
welfare: gains from fiscal
decentralization 16–17; implications
of inter-jurisdictional competition
29–30; reform of in USA 24, 26