2011年4月19日星期二

To develop, a country must first shrink?

By David Lynch J.

The idea that cutting government spending can trigger an immediate economic recovery lies in the heart of the new proposal of the Chairman of the Committee on House budget, Paul Ryan. Credit conservatives the phenomenon called "expansionist fiscal contraction" with the revitalization of the economy of the Sweden and Canada, among others. Here is how the evidence stacks.

NEW ZEALAND, 1984
Pro: Conservative U.S. point downward without compromise of New Zealand compensation, down nearly 60% from 1984 to 1996 and the support of the cross-party for an ambitious program of reforms. Those included slashing rates of tax for individuals and companies, selling of State monopolies and get rid of agricultural subsidies. The reward: public debt is reduced and the accelerated growth of 4.7% in 1993.

Con: Reforms were less successful for workers: unemployment averaging more than 8% in the 1990s and was raised at the end of the decade when the transformation began in 1984.

IRELAND, 1987
Pro: Hampered by levels of third world debt, 18% unemployment and debilitating brain drain leakage, Ireland in 1987 began a new course. It significantly reduced its budget deficit and implement the foreign direct investment in the Centre of its economic strategy. The thrust of growth as a result earned the country the moniker "Celtic Tiger". In 1997, the Irish contentedly per capita income more than their former colonial masters in the United Kingdom.

Con: The Ireland recovery was assisted by two devaluations of the currencies which stimulated exports. Improving tax also decreased the interest rates of two figures, providing boost impossible to replicate today, when short-term rates are effectively zero. Ireland, before veering in a bubble of expensive, like credit something to the United States can count on: demand strong for its exports.

CANADA, 1993
Pro: A new Government reduced federal spending as a percentage of GDP from 22.3% to 17.9% in four years. Prime Minister Jean Chrétien reduced unemployment payments, abandoned the expensive EH-101 helicopter program as part of a wider withdrawal in defence spending and reformed national pension plan. Economic growth has elapsed and the federal budget moved from deficit to surplus.

Con: As the Ireland, the Canadian economy has obtained an important coup de pouce of devaluation of the currency strong. Caused lower loons of annual exports to more than double in 2000. It is unlikely that trading partners of the U.S. tolerate a similar dip in the greenback, path given that every major economy attempts to export its to prosperity. The reorganization of his pension, Canada covered taxes on employers and employees, the anathema to conservative U.S..

SWEDEN, 1994
Pro: The classic European State welfare seemed to have reached an impasse in the 1990s. A bust of housing and the banking crisis had it riddled with debt and 11% unemployment. In 1994, the Sweden began shrinking of the Government of the economy of 71% to less than 60 per cent six years later. Growth average of 3.5% per year from 1994 to 2000.

Con: Success of some of these changes is difficult to assess since the beginning of the 1990s were a period of epic financial crisis. Sweden was one of the few countries in Europe to partially privatize its pension system. But the pioneering move seems less attractive after a decade of walk on water stocks.

Lynch is a reporter for Bloomberg News.

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