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Growth in the 1990s: Common lessons across sectors

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7/12/09. 1. Growth in the 1990s: Common lessons across sectors. Cairo, Egypt. November 8,2004 ... Policy reform generally had the magnitude of impact expected ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Growth in the 1990s: Common lessons across sectors


1
Growth in the 1990s Common lessons across sectors
  • Cairo, Egypt
  • November 8,2004

2
Are there common lessons from the experiences of
policy reform?
  • Macroeconomic
  • External policies
  • Privatization
  • Financial sector

3
Three common lessons
  • Policy reform generally had the magnitude of
    impact expectedgrowth expectations were too
    high
  • Getting rid of discretion is too high a price to
    paybut properly exercised discretion is
    difficult to achieve
  • Expectations are central

4
Three implications for policy making
  • Common principles, heterogeneity of
    implementation
  • Focus on initiating and sustaining episodes of
    rapid growth
  • Pro-active actions of government have to be
    scaled to capacity

5
Growth is nearly always a transitional
phenomena, differences in steady state growth
are small
6
Micro-economists were generally right about
direction and magnitude of the impact of policy
reform Trade
  • Most estimates of the impact of tariff reform are
    a few percent of GDP, with small associated
    growth impacts
  • The output gain increases with the square of the
    distortion
  • Discretionary restrictions (without effective
    secondary markets) can have huge losses

7
What is to be done about discretion?
  • Diagnosis of the 1990s
  • Attempts to limit discretion in policy making
  • Lessons from the experience

8
Diagnosis pre-1990s Discretion is the problem
  • Inadequate information led to erroneous
    decisions,
  • Insufficient (and overstretched) technical
    capacity to take correct decisions,
  • Multiple objectives led to ineffective actions,
  • Policy actions were politicized in a way that led
    to sacrifice of effectiveness for political
    expediency (e.g. populism),
  • Inadequate incentives for public sector officials
    to be dynamic or to innovate.
  • Outright corruption

9
The diagnostic pre-1990s illustration with
Central Banks
10
Three ways to limit discretion of government
  • Move activities into the market (privatize,
    deregulate)
  • Pursue rules based regulation by independent
    or autonomous bodies
  • Enter into binding international agreements

11
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12
Lessons from the limit discretion movement
  • With weak background institutions rules and
    discretion are identical
  • Eliminating discretion is like squeezing a
    balloonit just changes shape
  • Both tied and untied hands have their dangers

13
Key role of expectations
  • A policy is a sequence of future policy actions
    which depends on states of the world
  • Investors/entrepreneurs respond to expected
    profitability
  • Hence, anything can happen, depending on how
    current policy actions affect anticipated future
    actions

14
Key role of expectations Examples
  • Modest reforms can have enormous growth
    impactsif they are the harbinger of future
    reforms
  • Enormous policy action changes can have no
    impactif they are perceived as temporary
  • Digging deeper can have perverse impacts
  • With credibility the direction of effects can be
    reversed (e.g. Chile and deficits)

15
Implication 1 Common principles, heterogeneity
of implementation
  • Institutions cannot matter
  • Institutions are all important
  • Both are true

16
Implication 2 Initiating and sustaining
episodes of rapid growth
  • Growth is about confident belief that output will
    be much higher in the future
  • What current actions will convince investors
    (small, large) that output will be double in ten
    years?

17
Implication 3 Actions have to be scaled to
capacity
  • There are no arguments in principle in favor of
    limiting discretion of government
  • It all depends on the capacity to exercise
    discretion productively
  • Improving that capacity is central
  • If you dont have it, you shouldnt do it

18
The wrong debates
  • Is activist industrial policy good or bad?
  • Is free trade better than use of trade as an
    instrument?
  • Should country regulate banking or have public
    sector banks?
  • Should utilities be private or public?
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