Title: Friedrich Heinemann
1Explaining reform deadlocks
- Friedrich Heinemann
- ZEW Mannheim
- E-Mail heinemann_at_zew.de
- Workshop Economics Meets Psychology
- Frankfurt, Deutsche Bundesbank, 14 July 2004
2- Explanations for slow reforms
- Macro-approach based on EFW indicator
- Descriptive insights
- Probit regressions
- First conclusions
- Outline of planned research project
3Starting point
- Long lags between problem identification and
institutional change - Particularly relevant for large Euro countries
- High economic costs of institutional stickiness
- Reform policies unpopular
- Why do voters hurt themselves?
4Rational explanations
- Distributive effects of reforms coupled with
interest group power - J-curve effects and short time horizons of
certain lobbies (ageing society) - Uncertainty of outcomes and risk aversion
- Coordination problems (Alesina and Drazen (1991)
war of attrition)
5Doubts about solely rational explanations
- Status quo brings about uncertainty (e.g.
pensions). - Structural stickiness affects large shares of
population and interest groups. - Strong incentives for reform winners to
compensate losers.
6The case for behavioural economic policy
- Irrationality should be more relevant at the
ballot box compared to financial markets - Irrational voting is costless from an individual
point of view. - Caplan (2001) treats irrationality as a standard
good where demand depends on price. - Rational irrationality vs. rational ignorance.
7Transferring behavioural finance insights
- Status quo bias preference for one option only
because it happens to be the status quo - Endowment effect preferences depend on whether a
certain good is possessed or not - Loss aversion utility function non-continuous in
reference point which is the status quo - All these anomalies benefit the status quo and
hint to irrational psychological barriers to
change.
8Empirics of reforms a macro approach
- Country panel
- Definition of a reform indicator
- Comparing properties of reform and no reform
countries - Searching for causal links
- Reminder No single approach is capable of
testing whole universe of potential factors
9Quantifying reforms
- Challenge quantifying reforms
- Suggestion A reform event is defined as a
significant change in the Economic Freedom of the
World (EFW) index - Characteristics of EFW index
- available since 1970 in 5 year intervals,
- for 123 countries,
- 38 variables in current version,
- scale 0 (completely unfree) to 10 (free),
- grouped into government, legal system, money,
freedom to exchange, regulation, - Aggregate index as unweighted mean of five
sub-components.
10Advantages EFW as reform indicator
- Data availability (e.g. compared to Heritage
Foundation), - availability of sub-indices,
- clearly established link with growth the index
indeed measures changes relevant for growth
potential, - lack of alternatives.
11Frequency of reform events (in of period
observations)
A reform event is defined as a change in the EFW
aggregate indicator by at least 0.5/0.75/1.0
points.
12Explanatory variables objective need for reforms
- unemployment (level and change),
- growth (level and change)
- openness export ratios, extent of capital flows
- change real effective exchange rate
- country size measured by population
- starting value of EFW index
13Explanatory variables political economic factors
- age structure such as population share above 65
(-) - dependency ratio (-)
- life expectancy ()
14Explanatory variables rational ignorance and
limited rationality
- school enrolment (),
- availability of media information (?)
- financial development as proxy for economic
education () - Note hard to differentiate between rational
ignorance and limited rationality in macro
approaches.
15Test for differences in mean for reform/no reform
events (number of observations in brackets) - I
16Test for differences in mean for reform/no reform
events (number of observations in brackets) - II
17Probit regressions
- Specification
- dependent variable 1/0 reform/no reform within
five-year-window - reversed causation problem explanatory variables
prior to five-year-window - inclusion of time and income group dummies to
account for country heterogeneity and reform
moods - Data availability leads to elimination of
- unemployment ratio, GDP p.c., real exchange rates
- Elimination of variables due to general
insignificance - dependency ratio, newspapers, TV-sets, population
size, bank credits
18 Probit regression reform determinants,EFW total
Time and income group dummies not reported p
values in parentheses, // significant at
10/5/1.
19Probit regression reform determinants,EFW
sub-indices
not reported time and income group dummies,
growth and life expectation (both always
insignificant) p values in parentheses,
// significant at 10/5/1.
20Conclusions from this first macro-approach
- Objective need for reforms variables perform
well. - Changing fashions in reform moods.
- Hint to political-economic factors probability
of reform decreases with increasing age of
population. - Level of education relevant for government sector
reforms. - But Macro-approach only of limited use for
assessing degree of (ir)rationality.