The global crisis and Covid-19 pandemic highlighted the limitations of the European Economic and Monetary Union, particularly the lack of a fiscal union for cross-border risk sharing.
This column proposes a central fiscal capacity for the euro area in which
transfers to/from regions are driven by euro-area, country-specific,
and region-specific shocks. The scheme can produce substantial
stabilisation of regional growth with a limited need for the system as a
whole to borrow in any given year. The success of the current Recovery
and Resilience Facility will be an important litmus test for such a
broader central fiscal capacity.
The crises over the
past 15 years, culminating with the recession triggered by the Covid-19
pandemic, have shown that the architecture of the European Economic and
Monetary Union (EMU) is still incomplete in several dimensions. Apart
from the absence of a fully-fledged banking union and a capital market
union, the EMU lacks a fiscal union that facilitates cross-border risk
sharing through central-level fiscal instruments (Van Rompuy et al.
2012).1
Hence, several
proposals have been made for a central fiscal capacity (CFC) that allows
EMU member state economies to be stabilised in response to adverse
macroeconomic shocks (e.g. Juncker et al. 2015, Arnold et al. 2018).
Existing proposals mainly aim at cushioning the effects of euro
area-wide or country-specific shocks. The recently established EU
Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF), adopted in response to the
Covid-19 pandemic, has some features of such a CFC.2
None of the existing
CFC proposals targets region-specific shocks. Regional shocks are
important business cycle drivers and can come from different sources –
for example, from a natural disaster hitting a specific region or from
the sectoral specialisation of a given region. Importantly,
stabilisation of regional shocks may usefully complement monetary and
national fiscal policies, which address shocks that are common across all
regions in the euro area or across all regions of a country. In fact,
these common policies will suit a wider range of individual regions when
the latter feature business cycles that are better aligned.
In a recent paper
(Beetsma et al. 2022), we propose a CFC for the euro area, in which
transfers to and from regions are simultaneously driven by euro
area-wide and country-specific shocks, but also by region-specific
shocks. The scheme is highly flexible and can be easily modified in
response to new crises. The main advantage of our proposal is that it
encompasses the shocks coming from the three levels (euro area,
national, and regional) into one single scheme, thus allowing more or
less weight to be given to one level versus another according to
political and economic considerations.
Our proposed
transfer scheme works as follows. First, we collect data on regional
output growth for 928 NUTS3 euro area regions from 1999 until 2021 (from
the European Commission’s ARDECO dataset). Second, we decompose
regional output growth (in deviation from the region’s historical
average) into three different components, or ‘factors’, which may be
viewed as distinct business cycles: a euro area-wide component, a
national component, and region-specific one.3 Indeed,
intuitively, one can think of a region being influenced by common shocks
hitting the whole euro area (e.g. the global financial crisis in 2009
or the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020), shocks affecting only one country or a
sub-set of euro area countries, and shocks hitting a specific region or
a few regions but not all other regions in the same country. Third,
fiscal transfers from the CFC are engineered to (partially) compensate
for each of these shocks. Importantly, the scheme is symmetric.
Therefore, in periods of growth above historical average, a specific
region would contribute to the scheme.
Figure 1 shows that
the euro area factor explains most of output variation in the Western
part of Germany, Northern Italy, some regions in Eastern France, the
Netherlands, and Belgium. Together, these regions broadly correspond to
what is traditionally considered as the ‘euro area core’. However, for
some other countries, the country factor is by far the most important
driver of regional output. Greece, for example, was highly exposed to
the sovereign debt crisis, which had country-specific features.
The regional factor
is important in some parts of the euro area periphery, namely, most of
Ireland and some regions of Greece, the South of Italy, and Portugal.
Interestingly, most of Eastern Germany and South Italy also fall into
this group. This may not be surprising. These areas are economically
less developed and less active in competing on the EU internal market.
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