According to Godley & Izurieta, and I believe them, in the current 
implosionary era, monetary policy is especially ineffective at preventing 
either deepening collapse or persistent stagnation. But what's fiscal 
policy to do? The first quote below suggests the unlikelihood of further 
expansionary programs in the US, except old-fashioned military 
Keynesianism. The problem is the political requirement (enthusiastically 
endorsed by the Democrats) that a budget surplus be maintained. The second 
article suggests that expansionary fiscal policy won't happen in Europe. It 
also seems quite unlikely in Japan. So what's going to happen?

 From SLATE:

The LA [TIMES] ... leads with HHS secretary Tommy Thompson's comment 
Thursday that the slowing economy makes it more likely that funds will not 
be available to make good on a Bush administration commitment to extend 
health insurance coverage to some of those Americans who don't now have it. 
Thompson tells the paper that a pet program of his for covering children of 
low-income families is imperiled. He also casts financially-based doubts on 
the prospects for the administration's plans to reform Medicare or add a 
new prescription drug benefit.

-----------

The ECONOMIST/August 25, 2001
EDITORIAL
Scrap the stability pact

THOSE who invent monstrous chopping machines, from Procrustes to Dr 
Guillotin, have a nice way of subsequently falling victim to them. It was 
thus divinely fitting that Hans Eichel, Germany's finance minister, should 
be one of the first to grumble publicly about Europe's "stability and 
growth pact", whose fiscal limits Germany may soon run up against. For the 
monstrous stability pact was designed and imposed, against the reservations 
of other putative single-currency members, by the previous German 
government, back in 1996.

Mr Eichel has since renounced his apostasy, sworn fealty to the doctrine of 
budget discipline and promised not to seek any changes to the stability 
pact.... More's the pity. For, as he initially suggested, the automatic 
chopping that can be required by the stability pact could do serious harm 
in an economic downturn-of precisely the kind that now looms.

The stability pact sets legally binding ceilings of 3% of GDP on euro-zone 
countries' budget deficits. The penalty for a breach is payment of a 
non-interest-bearing deposit that can be converted into a fine as large as 
0.5% of GDP. There is a let-out clause in the event of recession, but it is 
far too tightly drawn, applying only if GDP falls by a minimum of 0.75%. 
Had the pact been in operation over the past 15 years, both France and 
Germany would have been liable to pay fines on at least three occasions apiece.

Why does such a seemingly barmy pact exist? The German fear was that, 
without it, every euro member would have an incentive to run a big deficit, 
since the cost in higher interest rates and greater default risk would be 
shared collectively. Fiscal discipline was needed to get into the euro, but 
was even more urgent afterwards if the markets were to have confidence in 
the currency.

These arguments are entirely bogus. If a euro member borrows more, the 
impact on other countries' interest rates is minimal. So long as there is 
no chance of a bail-out by the centre-and the rules of Europe's monetary 
union specifically rule this out-default risk will remain with the borrower 
and be reflected in its bond yields. And, though markets generally like 
fiscal discipline, larger budget deficits are more forgiveable than having 
the wrong fiscal stance for the circumstances.

That is a particular danger now, as the euro area faces the possibility of 
its first recession. The single currency has deprived its members of any 
independent control over monetary policy or the exchange rate, so the 
burden of any necessary response to a recession falls more on fiscal 
policy. Yet the European Commission has declared that, in Italy, Germany 
and France, the stability pact must not only preclude any fiscal easing but 
even trammel the operation of fiscal "automatic stabilisers". That could 
mean that these countries are required to raise taxes or cut public 
spending even as their economies slow. That smacks of 1930s-style 
self-flagellation.

Mr Eichel hinted that the stability pact should apply to levels of 
spending, not to budget deficits. The Belgians, Italians and others have 
suggested that the pact should be revised so that it applies to cyclically 
adjusted deficits, to allow more automatically for the effects of booms and 
busts. But since the stability pact serves no positive purpose, and risks 
doing such serious harm, it would be far better and cleaner simply to get 
rid of it altogether.

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http:/bellarmine.lmu.edu/~JDevine
"It takes a busload of faith to get by." -- Lou Reed.

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