Title: Maintenance services
1Disentangling the Links Between Welfare Spending
and Market Expansion in Developing Countries
Nita Rudra University of Pittsburgh rudra_at_pitt.ed
u
Irfan Nooruddin Ohio State University
nooruddin.3_at_osu.edu
21. Introduction Puzzle
- Focus of recent scholarship whether government
welfare spending in less developed countries
(LDCs) must be sacrificed at the altar of
globalization? - We do not know why LDC governments would comply
with such reforms. - Domestic politics supporting government reduction
in welfare commitment is treated rather
abstractly. - Assumption owners of mobile capital and export
producers motivated by profit maximization are
uniformly demanding welfare reforms to reap
economic benefits.
31. Introduction (cont) Research question
- Does the expansion of welfare spending in less
developed countries affect their integration into
todays dynamic and highly competitive global
markets?
41. Introduction (cont) Broad implications
- If welfare spending has no noticeable effects on
international market prospects, then existing
logic of the RTB demands immediate
re-evaluation. - If it is confirmed that the size of the welfare
budget does negatively impact prospects for
international market expansion, the RTB logic
holds, but existing models suffers potential
endogeneity problems. - If welfare spending actually encourages market
integration (by improving productivity, the stock
of human capital and/or overall stability), the
logic of the RTB hypothesis would have to be
fundamentally reexamined.
52. The existing literature
- RTB hypothesis
- Pressure to compete in export and financial
markets - Government welfare spending viewed as
unaffordable (raises production costs and
inhibits sound macro fundamentals) - Leads to RTB Neighboring states want to maintain
competitive parity - Non-issue in OECD countries (Garrett 1998, Hicks
1999, Iverson and Cusack 2000, Kwon and Pontusson
2007, etc.) - Issue in LDCs b/c theoretical mechanisms linking
global economic pressures with cutbacks are
vaguely specified (Rudra 2002, Kaufman and Segura
1998, Wibbels 2006).
62. Existing literature neglects causal logic
of RTB
- Kaufman and Segura (2001) Secular shifts in the
preferences and relative power of business
sectors exposed to increases in international
competition curb social spending over the long
term. - Wibbels (2006) Under tight macroeconomic
conditionstradables are likely to have a
dominant interest in fiscal retrenchment at the
expense of spending on human capital.
73. Identifying hypotheses
- The links between export-oriented firms and
welfare spending - H1 Increased welfare spending leads to lower
exports and trade. H1 confirms World Bank
hypothesis and causal logic of RTB. - H2 increased welfare spending leads to higher
exports and trade H2 confirms ILO perspective
and the RTB logic needs to be reexamined. - H3 increased welfare spending has no effect on
exports and trade H3 suggests that the RTB logic
needs to be reexamined. - The links between mobile capital and welfare
spending - H4 Increased welfare spending leads to less
capital inflows H4 confirms the pull hypothesis
and confirms the causal logic of RTB - H5 increased welfare spending leads to more
capital inflows H5 confirms pull hypothesis and
challenges the logic of RTB. - H6 capital flows are more responsive to external
factors rather than the level of welfare
spending H6 confirms the push hypothesis and
challenges the logic of RTB.
84. Models - PRELIMINARY
- Model I Panel Vector Autoregression (Love and
Zicchino 2006) - Assesses effects of spending variables on
globalization - Regresses each variable on its own lags and lags
of other variables in the system (Exports, net
capital flows, net FDI, economic growth, SS and
welfare Spending, education Spending, healthcare
Spending) - Model II TSCS model
- Regresses globalization vbles (exports, net k
flows, fdi) on welfare variables (SS, education,
health) - Controls growth, market Size, IMF loans,
democracy, interest-rate spread, size of skilled
labor pool - Year and country fixed effects included
95. Results -PRELIMINARY
- Results from Model I (VAR)
- Exports and FDI granger-cause each other
- Exports and FDI are granger-caused by economic
growth - None of the spending variables affect either
Exports or FDI - Results from TSCS
- None of the spending variables has any effect on
either exports or FDI - Rather, exports and FDI are affected by economic
growth, size of the skilled-labor pool (exports),
and cost of borrowing capital relative to world
market (FDI) - Period and Unit fixed effects are strongly
significant, suggesting importance of common
intl push factors historical legacies
respectively.
106. Interpretation of Results
- Governments and business are using globalization
as an excuse for long-needed domestic welfare
reform - Business incentives weaken labors bargaining
power in the workplace - ISI strategy gt buy cooperation of urban labor
groups in key sectors - Form distributional coalitions to insist that
this type of state intervention continues (Olson
1979) - Generous pension benefits and job security are
examples of common labor benefits that have
persisted in developing countries way past the
ISI period. - Whether or not the cuts actually affect their
bottom line, successful reform is an advance
towards loosening privileged labors political
leverage and capital has more room to move
116. Interpretation of Results (cont)
- Government incentives weaken labors
bargaining power in formal political arena - Welfare spending in LDCs tends to be regressive
and inefficient (World Bank 2001, Rudra 2004) - The welfare budget is affecting large budget
deficits. - Governments eventually turn to favor reform since
it will be harder to earn rents - Privileged Labors incentives war of
attrition (Alesina and Drazin 1991) - Losing credibility with globalization
- Media and policymakers underscore link between
improving competitiveness and labor reforms
127. Conclusion PRELIMINARY
- Causality between globalization and welfare is
unidirectional international market expansion is
correlated with welfare retrenchment but this
policy change in turn is not improving the
international economic standing of LDCs. - Conventional RTB wisdom that internationally-orien
ted business is uniformly demanding that
government lower spending because it affects
export competitiveness and their incentives to
invest. - We propose that policymakers are using
globalization as an excuse for domestic welfare
reform. - In IPE Difference between ends and means