Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Keep reasoning


A tale of mixing two policies

Policy 1: Fiscal consolidation (FC)

In his massive fiscal consolidation effort, the actual Portuguese Government had decreased public wages by suppressing the 13th and 14th months (called Summer and Christmas subsidies in Portugal). Later the Portuguese Constitutional Tribunal (TC) found that this was illegitimate because it went against the equity between private and public workers (!) and forced the government to give back one of the subsidies. 
The immediate implication would be an increase in public expenditure and a worsening of the deficit. 
To maintain the decrease in expenditure the Government decided to increase the social security contributions (ssc) paid by public employees by 7% (which is equal to 1/14). Consistently with the TC the increase in ssc is extended to all the workers (remember the private-public equity).

transition to…

Policy 2: Fiscal devaluation (FD)

Now you find yourself with an increase in 7% of the ssc paid by private employees which allows you to decrease social security paid by all firms by 5.5% (assuming public employees are 15%-20% of total employees). 
The willingness to maintain the decrease in public expenditure, and avoid a further increase in the deficit created the room for a fiscal devaluation. A "creative" FD as this is not what was suggested in previous studies/posts. My preliminary bird-eye view is that 

- in the long run total TSU has increased, therefore the labor-wedge has increased. The increase is small, 1.5%, but goes in the wrong direction, augmenting the labor market distortion.

- in the short run, the efficacy on competitiveness crucially depends on which wage is rigid: the net nominal wage (take home) or  the nominal wage gross of social security. In the original version of the FD (with VAT), when the decrease in TSU paid by employers decrease, the nominal take home wage is assumed not to increase which allows the gain in competitiveness. In this version of the FD, the nominal take home wage decreases because of the increase in ssc paid by employees. 

There are other differences between the FD with VAT and SSC paid by employees. Especially on the negative impact of demand. I am not going to tackle them here. I will underline the need to introduce some progressivity in the TSU.

At present Portugal needs to maintain its calm, avoid precipitous decisions and present clear-minded scenarios together with policies and their trade-offs.


      

Source | The Portuguese Economy | http://theportugueseeconomy.blogspot.com/2012/09/keep-reasoning.html

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