If Berlin, Frankfurt and Bruxelles continue to say “no”, there won’t be
alternatives to Grexit, and that’s the end of the euro as we know it. At that
point the euro architecture will have failed (in fact, it has already failed)
and the very idea of Europe of Europe’s founding fathers will have died (in
fact, it has already died).
If Greece does exit the euro, nobody knows what will happen next. A
country like Italy is seriously exposed, and the simple thought that it might
be the next to tremble should be enough to scare the
hell out of us all, including the euro orthodox thinkers who have brought us to
this point.
But even if nothing serious happens, and Grexit is absorbed costlessly
(save for the Greeks, but “who cares about the Greeks?” Europe VIPs would
wonder…), there is no way for a country like Italy to raise itself from its debt-cum-depression trap without a major
boost to internal demand.
A country like Italy for too many years has been bound to navigate
without steering wheel. It has no macro-policy instruments left: no monetary
policy, no exchange rate policy, and no fiscal space available (with the
exception of a few decimal points allowed within the fiscal compact); “its”
central bank (the ECB) has been pursuing a de facto asymmetric objective:
overreacting to any symptom of inflation beyond 2 percent, accepting passively
zero inflation until when – very much belatedly – Mr. Draghi was able change
course. If cancelling Greek debt is taboo, let’s imagine how simply impossible
would that be for Italy… Yes, there are important reforms that Italy should
undertake, including strengthening the administration of civic justice,
fighting pervasive corruption, modernizing education, changing the selection
process of the ruling class, just to cite a few. But even assuming that this is
done, what are the chances that this triggers demand and jumpstart growth any
time soon? Zero.
In short, even if negative growth has bottomed out in Italy, there is
nothing that can prevent Italy from remaining trapped indeterminately in a
situation of stagnation with increasing debt.
What should be done? We reiterate our proposal. Italy needs a huge
reduction of its fiscal burden. How?
The government issues rights to tax cuts two years after issuance. Call
these rights tax credit certificates (TCCs). These are non-debt bonds only
commit the government to reduce the tax burden of their bearers by an amount
equivalent to the nominal value of the bonds two years after the bonds have
been issues. We’ll see why the two-year deferral in a moment.
The TCCs are transferable, can be sold in exchange for euros, and may be
thus used to finance immediate spending. Those who sell TCCs want to get euros
to buy stuff. Those who buy TCCs want to acquire rights to future tax cuts
(which means more future savings). Financial intermediaries can buy TCCs from sellers
at a discount and either use them for future tax cuts or resell them at a lower
discount and earn a profit.
The government allocates newly issued TCCs to households and
enterprises. Many households will want to convert them to finance consumption.
Enterprises can use the tax reductions to cut their prices and gain
competitiveness. In a depressed economy, the new spending triggered by TCC
issuances will have multiplier effects on output and employment. Credit
prospects will improve and banks will have an incentive to start lending again
to finance production and investment. The new output will raise fiscal
revenues. As projections show, a small multiplier (0,8) and the two-year
deferral on the TCC would be enough to avoid that the fiscal deficit in two
years time would increase as a result of the TCC-induced fiscal cut.
In previous articles we have indicated that the TCCs could act as a
quasi-money instrument and a currency parallel to the euro, and that they could
even be used by the public as a substitute for the euro to facilitate payments.
This has raised a lot of misunderstanding, in particular through the argument
that the new instrument would break the rules of the euro.
This is non-sense, since the TCCs would not be issued by the government
as a new currency and would not have the purpose of replacing the euro, even
though the public and the market might use them any way they wish (as for any
bond or asset). The only relevant fact is that the TCCs would make possible for
the government to engineer a huge tax cut in a situation where no other policy
lever is available. The TCCs allow for an intertemporal fiscal transfer from
the future to the present, enabling immediate spending and allowing the time
and the outpu response to generate the resources to finance the intertemporal
transfer.
Are there risks that this might not work?
No: if basic Keynesian macroeconomics is right, and from 2008 onwards
evidence has massively piled up indicating that it is.
No: if expansionary austerity proves to be a deep failure, as it has.
Besides, TCC issuances can be engineered in a way that includes
"safeguard clauses" if the increase in output generates less fiscal
revenues than anticipated. In previous articles, we have
offered some examples:
First, the government could announce a commitment to pay a fraction
(presumably, just a small one) of its public expenditures with TCCs.
Second, taxpayers could be entitled to receive TCCs as compensation for
additional euro tax payments: this would be equivalent to replacing tax raises
with compulsory TCC-for-euro swaps.
Third, TCC holders could be incentivized to postpone the use of TCCs for
tax reductions by receiving an increase in their face value (equivalent to
interest income being paid in the form of TCCs).
Fourth, the government could raise euros in the market by placing TCCs
with longer maturities instead of debt bonds.
In any case, these safeguards would be much less pro-cyclical than those
imposed by the EU to secure budget targets through spending cuts or tax hikes. In
fact, one or more of them used in combination would easily accommodate for even
significant shortfalls in primary budget surplus targets.
Mr. Renzi, please let’s stop this madness and let’s Italy out of this
trap.
since when are you supposed to say tccs will be exchanged in euros? could you show us a disclosure or something signed by italian bajnking sector in order to confirm your statement?
RispondiEliminaThey will be exchanged as they are a safe security, entitling the bearer to reduce her / his tax payments upon maturity. A tax credit is a valuable asset, there are many examples of this concept, in Italy as well as worldwide.
Eliminaas discussed earlier, california warrants were accepted by banking sector just after public spenditure achieved and not before. unfortunately, tccs proposal doesn't include public spenditure reforms.
EliminaCalifornia was a totally different case. Even if California's IOUs were accepted to pay local taxes (I don't even now whether this was the case) taxes levied at state level are just a small fraction of total public sector revenues in the US. Clearly, California's IOUs bearer had to rely on the federal government ultimately reimbursing them in dollars. OR ACCEPTING them to pay taxes at the FEDERAL level. But this wasn't the case. Had this be so, they would have been US TCCs: and they would have been widely accepted, at a very small discount.
EliminaIn a nutshell: TCCs are very effective if issued at national level, much less if issued at regional (state in the case of the US) / county / municipal level.
obviously, california warrants were different. however, principle's the same. tccs lack of discipline if not backed by a serious taxation control about raising taxes -public expenditure- fiscal frauds and tax evasion too.
EliminaTax evasion is not an issue. Tax (more precisaly, public sector revenues) actually paid are what matters. TCCs to be issued to jumpstart the economy would be a fraction of public sector revenues, which makes sure they would be valuable.
Eliminabut you can't be sure economy will growth. if not, do you have a plan b?
EliminaIf this wouldn't work, an euro breakup would be impossible to avoid. But as per our article: " Are there risks that this might not work? No: if basic Keynesian macroeconomics is right, and from 2008 onwards evidence has massively piled up indicating that it is. No: if expansionary austerity proves to be a deep failure, as it has."
Eliminaneither keynesianism nor monetarism work well anymore. this is the real lesson of 2008. we're entering a new world of economic environment.
EliminaKeynesianism worked perfectly. The Eurozone tried something different, and created an awful mess.
Eliminayour command economy is in bankruptcy because of too much keynesianism which your european authority are trying to solve by a strong monetarist reforms. it won't work. yes, you're in a big mess, as usual. good luck european buddies.
EliminaKeynesianism is not about command economy. It's not even about big government. It's about reactive government.
Eliminayou're loosing your italian money because of keynesian freeloaders from south europe. say hello to your savings. you can adopt keynes theories only if you're in an anglosaxon contry, not in a latin one. it won't work.
EliminaItaly was one of the most dynamic economies in Europe, 1945 to 2000. A keynesian policy setup worked very well indeed ;)
Eliminathat wasn't a keynesian economy but an "american" one. from 45 to 91. after that, command economy became more powerful in europe and your debt exploded. this also isn't a keynesian economy as you think but a statocratic instead.
EliminaThe US were keynesian enough 45 to 91. And even today they are a lot more keynesian than the Eurozone...
Eliminaamerica is a capitalist contry and not a keynesian one. political parties from the left to the righ also are capitalist as well. keynesian reforms can be used for a brief period of time in capitalis economy only and not in a socialist one. if you wanna adopt Keynes (for a brief period of time during a crisis), you gotta become capitalist first. anyway, you dislike capitalism and your socialism is not sustainable anymore. you are in a big mess.
Elimina