Title: GLOBALIZATION AND REFORM OF EUROPEAN SOCIAL MODEL (ESM)
1GLOBALIZATION AND REFORM OF EUROPEAN SOCIAL
MODEL (ESM)
- Author ANDRE SAPIR for ECOFIN
- (9 September 2005)
- Prepared by GIULIO LICO
2GLOBALIZATION AND REFORM OF ESM
-
- Key issues/challenges of Europe in globalized
world -
- EU Key Performance Indicators (KPI )
priorities in one world -
- EU enlargement deepening trade-off
-
- Gauge of overall un-sustainability / unfitness
of ESM -
- ESMs reform toward more flexibility is pivotal
to EUs future -
- Different LMSP recipes in MSs, suitable to each
ESMs taste -
- EU pushing through SMP, while MSs focusing on
LMSP -
- Micro reforms (supply side) / macro ones
coordination -
-
- EU policies/history and perspective
3EU Key Performance Indicators KPI priorities in
one world
- Growth 1 in Europe to sustain peace and
prosperity - Today growth driven by innovation
economy/flexible society - Developing countries catch-up by trade/GDP/income
distribution
1970 1985 TODAY
SHARE OF IMPORTS MANUF.GOODS IN DEVELOPED COUNTRIES FROM DEVELOPING ONES 10 45
FROM CHINA 2 15
SHARE W. POPULATION W GDP PPP EXPECTED P.A. GDP GROWTH NEXT YEARS
DEVELOPING ASIA 50 25 6
G7 11 45
EU-25 7 21 2
US 5 21 3
WORLD 100 100 4
- Globalization is faster than EU institutional
achievements - Choice for EU is to make globalization an
opportunity or a threat
4EU Enlargement-Deepening trade off
- SMP 27 for attractiveness of EU/ for comparative
advantage - Rosy scenario by elites enlargement as
positive sum game if MSs labour market social
policies (LMSP) are conducive to change in
specialization - as opposed to
- Grey scenario NMS by citizens enlargement as
zero sum game where gains of new member states
come at expense of old ones - Pan European industrial reorganization as threat
/ ? competition ? delocalization
? immigration -
- Enlargement by increasing social/economic
disparities is pit against the completion/deepenin
g of single market - Dysfunctional LMSP is a threat to currency union
() - Public discontent/lack of consensus, yet surfaced
in referendums and service directive, put single
market project (SMP) in stalemate
5Gauge of overall un-sustainability/unfitness of
ESM
- Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Sweden,
Netherland) - Highest level of social protection expenditures
- Extensive fiscal intervention on labour markets
active policy - Compressed wage structure, low income disparities
- Anglo-Saxon countries (UK, Ireland)
- Large social assistance of last resort
- Cash transfer primarily to working age people
- Conditional access to regular employment benefits
- Weak unions, wide wage dispersion, high incidence
of low-paid - Continental countries (Austria, Belgium, France,
Germany, Luxembourg) - Insurance based unemployment benefits and old age
pensions - Strong union and extensive coverage of collective
bargaining - Low income disparities
- Mediterranean countries (Italy, Greece, Portugal,
Spain) - Social spending on old age pensions
- Social welfare on employment protection and early
retirements
REDISTRIBUTION / VIA TAXES / TRANSFERS POVERTY AFTER TAXES / TRANSFERS
NORDIC 42 12
CONT 39 12
ANGLO 39 20
MED 35 20
POVERTY lt 60 AVERAGE DISPOSABLE INCOME POVERTY lt 60 AVERAGE DISPOSABLE INCOME POVERTY lt 60 AVERAGE DISPOSABLE INCOME
6Gauge of overall un-sustainability/unfitness of
ESM
- Protection against uninsurable market risks
provided by EPL and UB - Insiders (those with a stable and regular job)
prefer EPL to UB
7Gauge of overall un-sustainability/unfitness of
ESM
- Rewards to labour market participation
- Equity VS efficiency trade off
- The stricter the EPL of a model, the lower the
employment rate - The UB generosity plays a secondary role
- Poverty rate is weakly correlated with
redistributive policy but mostly to distribution
of human capital in the market, since the lower
the level of secondary education, the higher the
risk of poverty
8Gauge of overall un-sustainability/unfitness of
ESM
- Inefficient models are not sustainable in face of
strains on public finances from globalization,
tech. change, aging population - DEBT/GDP RATIO MED 81 CONT 73
NORDIC 49 ANGLO 36 - Non equitable model can be sustainable provided
they reflect a viable political choice - MED and CONT models must be reformed to
efficiency by reducing disincentives to work and
to growth with chosen path depending on political
equilibrium (CONT to NORDIC, MED to ANGLO or....) - Overriding reasons to reform inefficient welfare
states - Perceived un-sustainability
- Un-sustainability of CONT/MED to 2/3 of EU 25
and 90 of EU12 vs. Impairing EU.
9ESM reform towards more flexibility is pivotal
to EUs future
10Different LMSP recipes in MS, suitable to each
ESMs taste
- EES (European Employment Strategy) vs. OECD
(Organization of Economic Cooperation
Development) benchmarking. - Conceiving/engineering LMSP reforms by MSs
according to their own economic, social,
political reality - Coordination more an obstacle than a catalyst
since it blurs, among public, responsibility
about who is in charge of LMSP - No votes in referendum as reactions of fear of
unemployment, labour market reforms,
globalization, privatization and consolidation of
welfare states - Disaffection is the primary political problem for
European governments, since its directed both
against poor economic performance and against
reform measures designed to improve it - Since surmounting EU deficit perception is
difficult political problem for national
governments, placing responsibility where power
lies is crucial, so to MSs
11EU pushing through full SMP, while MS focusing on
LMSP
- Mutual interaction between product/capital market
structure and labour market one - In principle national labour market are domestic
issue for MS with no spill-over, but since they
interact with single market the better they
operate, the easier is to reform single market
and vice versa. - Chicken and egg dilemma is
- either
- to concentrate on EU product and capital market
liberalization and expect that this will trigger
labour market reforms at national levels through
some TINA (There Is No Alternative) process - or
- to act simultaneously at EU level and at
national one with more synergy -
- Lisbon agenda, as an attempt to enhance this two
handed coordination, so far has poorly delivered
12Micro reforms (supply side) / macro ones
coordination
- EU12 euro-zone share common currency, therefore
common interest rate set by ECB with respect to
average inflation in euro-zone - To the extent, therefore, that structural reforms
in one (or more) country affect the average
inflation of euro-zone, there is scope for
coordinating structural reforms - Importance of coordination since reforms are
costly in short term - Therefore reforms are easier while accompanied by
monetary expansion (to offset their effect on
monetary demand) and by fiscal relaxation (to
compensate the losers) - ECB is unwilling to engage in formal coordination
(it is independent) with the government of
euro-zone - Governments needs to act first to convince ECB
they are serious about economics reforms the
more credible the reforms the greater the
likelihood of a move by ECB - Coordinated structural reforms would be a
powerful signal for ECB and would help
governments to bridge the confidence gap between
EU governance and its citizens
13EU policies/history and perspectives
- SMP not fully implemented/rooted in yesterdays
thinking -
- Since 1993 only goods not yet services.
-
- Focused on large internal market / economies of
scale. - Less focused on todays priority new markets,
labour retraining, RD, education. - Missed labour market reform hampers growth
perspective -
- Without labour mobility at national level SMP is
impaired. -
- The watered down Bolkenstein directive impairs
70 of EU GDP employment growth - Rigidity in services limits competitiveness of
manufacturing sector and discourages foreign
multinational investments - polish plumber difficult reconciling between
SMP in EU27 with economic social disparities with
preservation of ESM for old MSs
14EU policies/history and perspectives
- It is not the single market that threatens the
European Social Model, but the inability to
reform it in the face of rapid global changes,
because the freedom to provide services within
the European Community and world cant be
stopped - Manufacturing in China and back offices in India
- Manufacturing and services by NMS in proximity
-
- Main policy equation to boost Europe
- Full SMP SGP reform quality budget at EU
level and LMSP reform at MS level, thereby - sustaining suitable ESM
- exploiting EU comparative advantage in the
world -
- Europe at crossroad between two options
-
- Full integration with political will
- or