We see the Recovery Fund as a gamechanger for Europe and the euro. But many investors are not yet convinced. We set out some of the pushback we have gotten, and explain why we still think the scepticism is overdone.
We have argued that the EU Recovery
Fund is a potential game changer for the periphery, and thus for the
overall stability of the euro area. But that is not to say that the
Recovery Fund will necessarily deliver as intended; financial and
economic stability is always a work in progress. In this note, we share
some of the more sceptical questions and reactions we have heard from
investors, as well as possible responses. Notable doubts include:
- How is a temporary facility without debt mutualization a ‘Hamiltonian moment’?
- Isn’t the facility too small by
post-covid standards of action elsewhere, notably the United States,
thus undermining its effectiveness?
- Won’t cumbersome governance arrangements and the prominence given to long-term projects slow disbursements and hence recovery?
- Will the Recovery Fund really provide additional stimulus or simply replace national spending?
- Have prospects for a permanent
fiscal instrument at the union level been compromised by the
establishment of a temporary pandemic facility?
Recovery fund Q&A
Not everyone is convinced that the fund
is a game changer for the periphery countries and for European stability
more generally. In this note, we comment on some of the more sceptical
reactions we have heard from investors.
How is this a
‘Hamiltonian moment’? Without debt mutualization, there is no resolution
of the Italian debt problem and hence no fundamental answer to concerns
about euro stability.
It is true that the Recovery Fund does
not mutualize past debt and, for now, proposes only modest forms of
common EU taxation to service debt. Worse, the Recovery Fund is in
principle a one-time response to a once-in-a-lifetime shock, limited in
scope, purpose, and duration – i.e., not a permanent instrument of
common fiscal policy. As such, comparisons to Alexander Hamilton’s 1790
reforms to assume state debts and establish a US federal budget and debt
market seem hyperbolic.
But all reforms since the inception of
the EU have taken place incrementally. The Recovery Fund is a very large
step in the direction of establishing a union level fiscal policy, and
even if it does not achieve Hamiltonian perfection, it is of signal
importance. Four observations in this regard:
- Common bond issuance in scale. The EU
is now on the verge of creating a very large liquid market for EU debt.
Through deficit financing, the Recovery Fund, and the various other new
EU-wide initiatives (such as the €100bn SURE employment support scheme),
the EU will create almost €1 trillion of AAA-rated long-term euro
assets. This provides euro investors a safe liquid instrument and
establishes a Euro-wide yield curve through 2058. Once this market for a
euro safe asset is established, it is difficult to see it scrapped by
design.
Highly rated sovereign bonds in Europe
Note:
Includes outstanding issuance by European sovereigns and supranationals
that are rated AAA by at least one agency, or AA+ by at least two
agencies. Agencies considered are S&P, Fitch and Moody’s. Source:
Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research
- Grants. For the first time, the EU will
provide grants – not just loans – in large amounts in response to an
adverse shock, with the bulk going to the euro periphery countries. This
is precisely in recognition of the debt sustainability challenges faced
by countries such as Italy. A common shock has hit the EU but it has
affected the higher debt southern European periphery countries more
adversely because of their weaker economic starting conditions and their
larger exposure to the sectors affected by the pandemic (tourism,
travel, hospitality). This has led to higher than average increases in
debt in these countries, potentially constraining the scale of fiscal
response. Grants restore at least some of the needed room for fiscal
action without jeopardising debt sustainability.
Periphery allocations as share of GDP
Source: European Commission, Morgan Stanley Research
Periphery allocations as share of total funds
Source: European Commission, Morgan Stanley Research
- Common Taxation. For the first time,
the taboo of a common EU tax has been broken. When approving the
Recovery Fund, the EU Council agreed on a modest (€6bn per year) plastic
tax. This will be adequate for any interest payments on the bonds in
the short-run without having to resort to the EU budget, let alone
member state budgets. The EU Council also agreed to look at other green
and digital taxes for implementation from 2022 onwards. The political
momentum behind this is strong in order to avoid interest or principal
payment contributions from the member state budgets.
- The precedent of centralised
counter-cyclical fiscal policy. The EU will be deploying large scale
central spending and easing the burden of the ECB. True, the ERF is
conceived as a one-off increase in the EU budget. That was the price of
achieving unanimity of the EU Leaders to act. So, it is fair to say that
this mechanism is unlikely to be deployed if an economic shock is
idiosyncratic or small. But the problem in the euro area is not small
shocks, for which there are numerous financing facilities, including the
European Stability Mechanism (ESM). The Recovery Fund will surely set a
compelling precedent for larger shocks with euro area-wide
consequences, and therefore substantially reduces the tail risks of a
euro break up.
By the
standards of covid-responses elsewhere, notably the United States, €750
billion is not exactly an awe-inspiring figure, is it?
The Recovery Fund effectively targets
the hardest hit countries in Europe’s southern periphery – Greece,
Italy, Spain, and Portugal. Relative to the size of those economies, the
amounts being made available in grants and lowinterest/long-term loans
are substantial. Fiscal stimulus ranging from over 2% to around 7% of
GDP per year for four years is assuredly a big deal for the growth and
sustainability prospects of those countries.
Markets certainly have taken note of the
Recovery Fund. Ever since the word got out of the core political
compromise underlying it – the Merkel-Macron proposal in mid-May – risk
spreads on periphery debt have fallen back substantially; Italy’s spread
has fallen by over 100 bps since that time, and is now below the level
at end-2019.
Italy 10Y yield spread vs Germany
Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research
That said, the sceptics might still
ask why all this has not translated into broader strength in euro
assets? Fair enough. Although the euro has appreciated, the performance
of Eurostoxx pretty much tracks the S&P500. However, as the
Nobel-prize winning economist Robert Shiller has argued,
it may take time for the market to absorb new information and for a new
narrative to take hold, especially in the context of a pandemic.
European and US stock market performance YTD
Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research
Isn’t the
governance framework problematic? The Frugal Four have imposed approval
rules that could slow Recovery Fund disbursements and hence recovery.
The EU Council did introduce political
oversight and review of countries’ spending plans, which is
understandable given the unprecedented scale of cross-border transfers.
But formal rules were also put in place to avoid undue delays. Two
points:
- First, to avoid deadlock, the EU
Council has explicitly agreed to forgo decision making by consensus and
rely instead on qualified majority voting. Thus, when the Commission
approves and submits countries’ spending plans to the EU Council,
endorsements will be done by qualified majority, not the usual
unanimity. Similarly, any sanctions proposed by the Commission for
breaches of “the rule of law” can be decided by qualified majority. This
is a major change in modus operandi of the EU to speed up decision
making.
- Second, although any EU leader can hold
up a disbursement if they have concerns about spending, their ability
to do so is circumscribed: the Commission can proceed with the qualified
majority decision after three months if there is no unanimous
resolution to the contrary.
Isn’t the
effectiveness of the Recovery Fund undercut to the extent that it goes
to long-term projects, which take time to get off the ground and cannot
respond to changing circumstances?
The Recovery Fund will only start
operating in 2021, and while 70 percent of the funds are expected to be
committed during 2021-22, actual disbursements will be made later,
likely peaking during 2022-23. So, it is certainly correct to say that
the main impact of the Recovery Fund will not be felt for some time. On
the other hand:
- The kind of supply shock confronting
the periphery countries is likely to last a long time. The Recovery Fund
will come on stream as the stimulus from national budgets tapers off
and as the ECB’s PEPP programme is wound down. The Recovery Fund will be
critical to sustaining demand at a time when recovery is at risk of
petering out in the periphery.
- It may be true that investment is a
less flexible instrument than current spending, and especially so when
the long-term implications of the pandemic shock are unclear. But green
investment, an agreed priority for the Recovery Fund, seems more urgent
than ever. And such spending should have positive employment, demand,
and network effects.
- The timing of disbursements, per se, is
arguably a secondary consideration. What matters from a macroeconomic
perspective is that spending is planned and known in advance, along with
approval-in-principle by the European Commission. Short-term delays in
cash disbursements from the Recovery Fund can easily be made up in debt
markets, allowing spending to proceed on track.
That said, we do agree that more thought
needs to go into Recovery Fund spending. As we have argued elsewhere,
in the time horizon of the Recovery Fund (2022-24), it would make more
sense to target spending to unconstrained sectors (e.g., green and
digital, where supply can readily respond to demand) than to constrained
sectors (e.g., tourism and transportation, where public spending is
unlikely to provoke strong supply and demand responses).
Is the
Recovery Fund really additional spending? Are we not just changing the
financing source of spending that member states would have undertaken
anyway?
In targeting the hardest hit economies,
the Recovery Fund also happens to be targeting the most fiscally
constrained ones – Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain. For sure the
grants element of the Recovery Fund is additional spending because it
does not add to national governments’ debt and does not have to be paid
back. However, there is no way of proving a counterfactual.
The reality is that there are no fiscal
adjustment paths agreed or even specified by either the Commission or
any member state with and without the Recovery Fund to assess the
additionality argument. The Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) has been
rightly suspended to allow governments to respond to the crisis as
needed. The SGP will be reinstated at some stage but not necessarily in
its pre-crisis form. Indeed, a review of SGP was already under way
before the crisis hit.
Ultimately, the growth path out of the
crisis will be a more important determinant of debt sustainability than
any fiscal adjustment path. In that sense, the Recovery Fund, with its
focus on spending in the hardest hit countries for the next few years,
can provide additional spending and a transition to the post crisis SGP.
Is the
Recovery Fund a pyrrhic victory for the proponents of a union-level
fiscal instrument? After all, a permanent increase in the EU budget was
sacrificed for a one-off pandemic fund.
This is a sophisticated political
economy critique. But whether it is a priori correct is not obvious.
Without taking too pointed a stand, we would note the following:
- While economists would probably prefer
to have scaled up the existing EU budget and make it more of an annual
budget that responds to economic conditions, this pre-supposes that
Europe is ready for such an arrangement politically. Clearly, it is not –
and foisting it on a divided polity may just deliver chronic impasses
and annual "fiscal cliffs". With the pandemic recovery fund, at least,
the EU has a decent chance of getting the stimulus needed in the
periphery countries hardest hit by the crisis.
- Although economists tend to frown on
the idea of earmarked funds such as the Recovery Fund, this is partly
because they do not always appreciate the political economy value of
earmarking. If earmarking fuel taxes to highways or green technology
increases political support for taxes and needed spending, then that
surely is better than the alternative of foregoing such spending. In the
case of the Recovery Fund, we see two benefits of earmarking: a) it
likely increases total stimulus in the more debt-constrained
peripheral economies, b) it likely ensures the stimulus has a large
growth impact, with higher investment and less spent on low-quality tax
cuts or increases in current spending.
- If the experiment in common fiscal
policy succeeds, it sets up the basis for garnering the political
support needed for a standing facility to respond to large macroeconomic
shocks. By the very narrowness of its scope, it could clearly
demonstrate the benefits of a common fiscal response.
About the authors
Reza Moghadam is Morgan
Stanley’s Chief Economic Advisor. His mandate spans global
macroeconomic policy research, as well as advising clients across the
banking, capital markets and investment franchises on global economic
and policy issues. Prior to this role, Reza was Morgan Stanley’s Vice
Chairman for Sovereigns and Official Institutions from 2014 to 2019.
Before joining Morgan Stanley, Reza served for 22 years at the
International Monetary Fund, spending much of his career as a key IMF
crisis manager. Given his expertise, Christine Lagarde appointed Reza to
head the IMF’s European Department during the Eurozone crisis, where he
was responsible for leading the IMF’s response to the crisis and acting
as the interlocutor with European policymakers from 2011 to 2014.
Before this, Reza helped spearheaded the IMF’s response to the Global
Financial Crisis, having been asked to head the Strategy, Policy and
Review Department by Dominique Strauss-Khan. Reza also held a number of
different senior roles at the IMF including Head of the Managing
Director’s Office under both Rodrigo de Rato and Strauss-Khan, and
senior positions in the IMF’s Asian Pacific Department during the Asian
financial crisis. Drawing on his experience both in the public sector
and with markets, Reza is a regular contributor to the global policy
debate, with a particular focus on Europe. He has written publically
on a number of issues, including central bank policies,
cryptocurrencies, Brexit and Eurozone reform. Reza holds a BA in
Mathematics from Oxford University, an MA in Economics from the London
School of Economics, and a PhD in Economics from the University of
Warwick.
Jacob Nell is a
Managing Director at Morgan Stanley, and chief UK economist. He joined
the firm in December 2010 and worked for four years as the Russia
economist, based in Moscow. Prior to joining Morgan Stanley, Jacob
worked for over five years in the oil industry at BP in London, where he
worked on strategy for Lord Browne, and at BP and TNK-BP in Moscow,
including as commercial director for greenfield projects. Previously, he
worked for ten years at the UK Treasury, including a stint in the Prime
Minister’s Policy Directorate at No.10 Downing Street (2001-03). He has
also worked for extended periods at the Russian (1995-97), Azerbaijani
(1999-2001) and Iraqi (2003-04) Ministries of Finance, and worked for
two years as assistant editor of the journal Central Banking. Jacob has a
BA degree in PPE from Balliol College, Oxford, and an MSc in Economics
from Birkbeck College, London.
Joao Almeida is a
member of the European economics team, with coverage focussed on the EU
periphery, including Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece, as well as the
euro area and the ECB. He joined Morgan Stanley after completing his
studies. Joao holds both a master’s degree in financial economics from
the Libera Universita Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli and
a master’s degree in finance from the NOVA School of Business and
Economics. He holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University
of Aveiro. He has received multiple awards for his academic performance
from the academic institutions where he studied, private financial
institutions and the Bank of Portugal.
Bruna Skarica is a
member of the European economics team, covering UK and Ireland. Before
joining Morgan Stanley, Bruna worked for KPMG UK, as an econometrician
in the company’s Macro Strategy consulting team and providing research
assistance to KPMG’s Chief Economist in the UK. She has a master’s
degree in economics from the London School of Economics and Political
Science, which focused on macroeconomics and monetary policy. In
addition, she has a postgraduate degree in econometrics from Birkbeck,
University of London.
Markus Guetschow is an
economist at Morgan Stanley, primarily covering Europe. Prior to joining
the firm in April 2019, he worked as an investment consultant at
Cambridge Associates in London, advising European and UK pension funds
on asset allocation and alternative investments. Markus has a BA in
International Relations from Queen Mary, University of London, an MSc in
Economic History and Development from the London School of Economics,
and an MSc in Finance and Economics from the University of Warwick.
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1.
↑ We acknowledge the contribution of Camille White to this report.
2.
↑
This article is based on research published for Morgan Stanley
Research on August 6, 2020. It is not an offer to buy or sell any
security/instruments or to participate in a trading strategy. For
important current disclosures that pertain to Morgan Stanley, please
refer to Morgan Stanley’s disclosure website:
https://www.morganstanley.com/eqr/disclosures/webapp/generalresearch . Copyright 2020 Morgan Stanley.
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