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The New Economic Policy
Consensus
Session 1
Professor Dermot McAleese
OUTLINE
The new consensus
Why policy has changed?
Implications for the future
Will the consensus last?
THE NEW CONSENSUS
Competition and the market system
Macroeconomic stability
Globalisation
A Successful Strategy for Growth Requires:
openness towards international trade
limited government intervention in the economy, and
macroeconomic stability
IMF, World Economic Outlook, May 1997, p 92
COMPETITION AND THE MARKET SYSTEM
Pro-competition policies
Labour market flexibility
Privatisation
De-regulation
Enterprise-friendly environment
MACRO-STABILITY
Price stability (independent CB, ‘hard’ ER)
Budget balance
Control of government spending
GLOBALISATION
Free trade
Foreign investment
Liberalisation of capital
Labour mobility
GLOBALISATION
Open door policies
(free trade, encourage foreign investment relax or abolish capital
controls)
Extending the scope of international trade
(agriculture, services, new issues)
Emphasis on export promotion
(instead of import restriction)
Multilateral and regional trade agreements
(Uruguay Round, WTO and Regional Trade Agreements)
WHY POLICY HAS CHANGED?
Dissatisfaction with past performance
Alternative paradigm
(failure of socialism, Africa vs Asia)
Government failure
Technology – external pressures
New policies deliver!
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE
Business climate
lower taxes
weaker trade unions
rewards for managers, skilled workers
less government
BUT, more competition
Work environment
labour market flexibility
less job security
more jobs
structural adjustment and low cost countries
International economy
role of World Trade Organisation (WTO)
foreign investment and the multinationals
capital mobility and the shifting balance of economic power
mutuality of benefits
AFRICA – AGENDA FOR
RECOVERY AND GROWTH
As part of the objective of raising growth and reducing
poverty, the IMF will continue to encourage African
countries to pursue strong macroeconomic policies:
no one benefits from high inflation, particularly not the poor;
large budget deficits crowd out private investment and discourage exports;
and arrears [large public debt] deters investors.
“
Raising Growth and Investment” Finance and Development December 2000 p. 33
and the Report continues ….
improve economic efficiency by liberalising trade and maintaining competitive
exchange rates
remove the state from direct involvement in the production of marketable goods and
services
enhance domestic competition in all sectors, especially agriculture
support regional integration efforts
improve infrastructure, particularly ports and communications
increase the share of government spending directed to education and health and
improve the delivery of services in these areas
root out corruption and improve the quality and integrity of the legate system
“Raising Growth and Investment” Finance and Development December 2000 p. 33
Questions
Q1. Outline the three pillars of the new economic
consensus.
Show how policy changes along new
consensus lines can lead to better economic performance.
E1. WHAT WENT WRONG WITH ARGENTINA?.
Q3. Is the new economic consensus likely to last? What
factors might tend to undermine it?
WILL THE CONSENSUS LAST?
Yes …. Provided it delivers!
Successes (East Asia) and Doubtfuls (New Zealand,
Argentina)
Convincing outcome for the developing countries will
require:
correct sequencing of the new policies
consistent application of reforms
attention to income distribution
good governance
international cooperation and increased aid
State intervention is needed to deal with market failure
‘The gains from trade liberalization should not
only be seen through a narrow economic lens.
Trade has also been a vehicle for promoting
broader political objectives, especially peace and
stability. Trade establishes mutually beneficial
links among nations, creating interest in
cooperation. It cements relationships among
disparate peoples and societies, lessening the risk
of conflict, and it strengthens the commitment of
governments to rules in the place of realpolitik’
World Trade Organization, Annual Report, 1998
‘Unlike the threat of war, which nowadays is usually
intermittent or sporadic, the challenge of the global
economy is ceaseless. The entire viability of India’s
democracy will therefore come to be tied more closely to
its economic performance, assessed in terms of stability,
growth and distribution.
Rulers and those who elect them will together have to
devise effective practical responses to the opportunities
and hazards of the international marketplace.
How they respond, what decisions they take ..... will
determine the future prospects of the sub-continent.’
Sunil Khilnani, The Idea of India, Penguin 1997
WHY THE CHANGE IN ARGENTINA?
Failure - hyperinflation, inefficient government, economic
performance
Old policies did not help the poor - inequality
Need to emulate Chile
US trained economists put into positions of influence
Need to become internationally competitive
Stability needed to attract FDI and grow faster