A greater likelihood of external, asymmetric shocks from conflicts, climate change, or future pandemics all press the urgency of establishing a euro area fiscal stabilisation capacity that has long been called for by academics as well as European and international institutions.
A fiscal stabilisation capacity is missing in the architecture of the euro area.
It could be needed to cushion large shocks that both monetary policy
and national fiscal policy cannot adequately address, either due to
limited policy space and/or the asymmetric nature of the shock itself
(e.g. Codogno and van den Noord 2020).
Filling this gap now seems more important than ever, as the
likelihood of large asymmetric shocks is poised to increase, and policy
space is limited. Large external shocks that undermine euro
area stability are more likely given the ongoing war in Ukraine, extreme
weather events, and transition risks stemming from climate change or
the pandemic. At the same time, high inflation and high debt imply
stretched common monetary and national fiscal space in many member
states.
As of now, there are no permanent and dedicated instruments
to foster macroeconomic stabilisation in response to external shocks
that work through public risk sharing. The Support to mitigate
Unemployment Risks in an Emergency (SURE) instrument is temporary, fully
disbursed, and designed to provide a one-time relief from the pandemic.
Private risk sharing complements (rather than substitutes) public risk
sharing and remains limited, given the incomplete banking and capital
markets union and insufficient cross-border labour mobility. National
fiscal buffers could alleviate the need for a fiscal stabilisation
capacity but building them to sufficient scale will take time and would
compete with the large green spending needs.
While other (mostly temporary) EU instruments, including the Recovery
and Resilience Facility, can support short-term stabilisation, their
primary objectives differ and may not always align with fiscal
stabilisation. Furthermore, they often require longer-term planning,
undermining their ability to quickly respond to shocks.
A loan-based fiscal stabilisation capacity
In a recent paper (Misch and Rey 2022), we propose a
loan-based fiscal stabilisation capacity for the euro area, referred to
as ‘stability fund’. This fund would be administered by the
European Stability Mechanism (ESM) and provide loans on favourable terms
in times of external shocks for short-term stabilisation purposes. The
loan maturity would be up to ten years with a three-year grace period,
and maximum loan amounts would be 4% of GDP within an overall envelope
of €250 billion. The interest rates would reflect funding conditions of
the ESM.
The specific design features strike a balance between
allowing for speedy disbursements and adhering to appropriate
conditionality. Activation of the fund would be based on expert
judgement and/or quantitative indicators including unemployment-based
metrics. Eligibility would require that a country’s public debt be
deemed sustainable and that the country is not subject to an excessive
deficit procedure, internal imbalance procedure, or a macroeconomic
adjustment programme.
These criteria would incentivise prudent fiscal behaviour in
economically good times and allow for swift loan disbursement, but also
ensure that loans are not provided in response to internal imbalances or
policy errors. The loans would not be earmarked for specific purposes
to avoid delays in times of crises. As a safeguard, they would have to
be used to enhance macroeconomic stability through appropriate fiscal
measures and debt management operations which excludes obvious misuse of
public resources. Upon request for support from the stability fund, the
ESM and the European Commission, in liaison with the ECB, would assess
whether eligibility and activation conditions are met (and carry out
other standard assessments as required for any loan under the ESM
treaty).
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