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Title: Another Slideshow from Ed Dolan


1
Another Slideshow fromEd Dolans Econ BlogWhy
hasnt the US become another Greece? A Comparison
of Two Budget Crises Posted April 4, 2013
Photo source Athens Indymedia via
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileGreek_riot_
police_3.jpg
  • Terms of Use These slides are provided under
    Creative Commons License AttributionShare Alike
    3.0 . You are free to use these slides as a
    resource for your economics classes together with
    whatever textbook you are using. If you like the
    slides, you may also want to take a look at my
    textbook, Introduction to Economics, from BVT
    Publishing.

2
Not Long Ago the US Looked a Lot like Greece
  • Not so long ago, the trajectory of the US
    government budget deficit looked a lot like
    Greece. Both countries seemed to be headed down
    the same rathole
  • Since then, Greece has moved from crisis to
    disaster while the US has begun a slow but steady
    recovery
  • What has made the difference?

3
Reason 1 Greece was already Worse Off than we
Thought
  • The first reason the US and Greek crisis have not
    continued in parallel is that already in 2009,
    the Greek economy was worse off than we then
    thought
  • This diagram compares recent data for the Greek
    deficit in 2007-2009 with the vintage 2010 data
    available three years ago
  • The Greek government has admitted that some data
    from that period were falsified to make the
    deficit look smaller than it really was

4
Reason 2 The Advantages of a Sovereign Currency
  • A second reason the US economy has done better
    than that of Greece is that the US has its own
    sovereign currency, the dollar
  • Greece, by contrast, is a member of the Eurozone.
    It has no independent control over its currency.
  • Having an independent currency has helped the
    United States in two ways . . .

5
A Sovereign Currency Allows More Exchange Rate
Flexibility
  • One advantage of a sovereign currency is greater
    exchange rate flexibility
  • This chart shows real effective exchange rates
    for the US and Greecea broad measure of
    international competitiveness
  • The US dollar has depreciated more during the
    crisis, helping US exports
  • The Greek exchange rate, linked to those of
    strong economies like Germany, has depreciated
    less

6
A Sovereign Currency Helps Keep Interest Rates Low
  • Another advantage is that a country with its own
    currency can, if need be, always issue enough new
    currency to pay its debts, but one with a shared
    currency cannot do so
  • The ability to issue additional currency to pay
    debts reduces the risk of default
  • Reduced default risk, in turn, lowers interest
    rates
  • Dramatically lower interest rates have made it
    far easier for the US to manage its debt during
    the crisis

7
Using the Output Gap to Track the Business Cycle
  • A countrys business cycle can be tracked using
    its output gap
  • The output gap is the amount by which real GDP
    exceeds or falls short of potential real output
  • Potential real output means the economys real
    GDP when it is operating along its normal trend,
    neither in a slump nor in a boom

8
Procyclical vs Countercyclical Fiscal Policy
  • Ideally, a countrys fiscal policy should be
    countercyclical. Such a policy would moderate the
    business cycle by stimulating the economy with
    tax cuts and new spending during a recession and
    using tighter policy to prevent overheating
    during a boom
  • In contrast, a policy that makes the business
    cycle worse by adding stimulus during a boom and
    applying austerity during a recession is
    procyclical

9
The Underlying Primary Fiscal Balance
  • A countrys underlying primary fiscal balance
    (UPB) provides a good indicator of whether its
    policy is stimulating or restraining the economy
  • The UPB is the governments budget surplus or
    deficit, adjusted to remove the effects of the
    business cycle on taxes and spending, as well as
    for one-off items like privatization revenue and
    tax amnesties

10
Procyclical Fiscal Policy in Greece
  • Fiscal policy in Greece has been strongly
    procyclical over the past decade, as indicated by
    the fact that the UPB and output gap have moved
    in opposite directions
  • During the boom years of the early 2000s, the
    underlying primary balance moved toward deficit,
    causing the economy to overheat
  • After 2009, at the insistence of its EU partners,
    Greece undertook stringent austerity measures.
    Its underlying primary balance rose into surplus
    as its output gap plunged into a deep recession

11
Procyclical Fiscal Policy in the United States
  • Fiscal policy in the United States has also been
    procyclical , but not as strongly so as in Greece
  • As in Greece, during the boom years of the early
    2000s, the US underlying primary balance moved
    toward deficit, causing the economy to overheat
  • In 2008 through 2010, the US at first used
    countercyclical stimulus to reduce the severity
    of the recession
  • After 2011, the US began to tighten fiscal
    policy. The UPB rose toward balance, but not into
    surplus. The recovery was slow but it did not
    stop completely

12
The Bottom Line
  • The United States did not become another Greece
    for three reasons
  • The Greek crisis was worse to begin with
  • A sovereign currency gave the US government more
    room to maneuver, especially in terms of interest
    rates and exchange rates
  • Both Greece and the United States have followed
    destabilizing, procyclical fiscal policies, but
    to a much greater degree in Greece than in the US.

13
  • For further discussion of the issues raised in
    this slideshow, see Why Hasnt the US become
    another Greece?, Ed Dolans Econ Blog, April 4,
    2013

Click here to learn more about Ed Dolans Econ
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