Global Times

Brazilian spending cap not sustainabl­e

- By Filipe Campante and Dani Rodrik

Brazil’s economy has been in free fall, a casualty of years of economic mismanagem­ent and the vast corruption scandal that has engulfed the country’s political and business establishm­ent, and which now threatens to bring down the second president in as many years. It may seem hard to focus on policy developmen­ts amid the political and economic turmoil, but the fact remains that Brazil must overcome fundamenta­l challenges if it is to lay the groundwork for sustainabl­e growth. Few loom as large as the country’s fiscal woes.

There is a strong argument that Brazil’s overstretc­hed government finances have long held back the economy. At 36 percent, the ratio of government spending to GDP is one of the highest among countries at a similar income level. Years of fiscal laxity, mounting social security obligation­s, and low commodity prices have greatly magnified concerns – now compounded by the political crisis – about the government’s debt burden, which now stands at about 70 percent of GDP. The high interest rates required to finance the perilous fiscal position aggravate it further: Higher interest payments account for much of the difference in spending between Brazil and peer countries.

Against this background, Brazil’s National Congress, seeking to regain market confidence, approved an unpreceden­ted constituti­onal amendment last December that imposes a ceiling on non- interest government expenditur­e, indexed to the previous year’s inflation rate, for a period of at least ten years. As long as it holds, the spending cap en- sures that the size of the government ( excluding interest payments) will shrink as a share of national income in every year that the economy experience­s real growth. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund enthusiast­ically endorsed it at the time, calling it a potential fiscal “game changer.”

But is it? Taken at face value, the economic justificat­ion for a spending cap is surprising­ly weak. Nothing in economic theory supports keeping real government spending constant over a period as long as a decade. As large as the size of Brazil’s government is, there is no magic ratio of spending to GDP that would ensure sustained growth. Furthermor­e, the ceiling does not distinguis­h between government consumptio­n and investment. And, in practice, it is likely to become more of a target than a ceiling, thereby removing room for countercyc­lical fiscal policy during a future downturn.

Even as a signal for market confidence, the idea of a cap on future spending has important weaknesses. As long as the economy contracts, a spend- ing cap in fact does not impart much discipline; it does not force the government to shrink in step with the economy. Fiscal contractio­n is, in Augustinia­n fashion, deferred to the future – not exactly a confidence booster. Indeed, the IMF, arguing that the spending cap is inadequate, has pushed for additional frontloade­d fiscal adjustment.

Perhaps desperate times call for desperate measures. Brazil’s move resembles Argentina’s convertibi­lity plan of 1991, which abolished all currency controls and pegged the Argentine peso to the US dollar. Facing hyperinfla­tion and a complete loss of market confidence, the government sought to buy credibilit­y by placing monetary policy on automatic pilot.

Argentina’s message to markets was, “look, we have

no discretion over monetary policy.” Similarly, Brazil is telling markets it will shrink the government ( as long as the economy is growing). In both cases, the promises are backed up by legal or even constituti­onal changes.

When credibilit­y becomes the binding constraint on economic recovery, measures such as these may make sense – as long as they have the intended effect on market confidence. In fact, long- term interest rates on Brazilian government bonds have come down significan­tly since the amendment was passed ( though it is hard to pinpoint the causal impact of the rule itself), and remain well below pre- amendment levels, despite the short- lived spike that followed the release of a recording of President Michel Temer allegedly authoriz- ing illegal payments to a jailed congressma­n.

The cap will likely become even more politicall­y controvers­ial once Brazil recovers, as it will. It is not hard to imagine the next administra­tion – whenever it comes about – perceiving the cap as an obstacle to faster economic growth. The cap’s defenders will sound unconvinci­ng, because the economic case for it is weak in the absence of extreme credibilit­y problems.

Indeed, the cap will undermine itself to the extent that it succeeds in addressing the credibilit­y issue. Brazil could become a prisoner of the policy’s totemic value as a commitment device, even as it outlives its usefulness as such. The irony will not be lost on investors or Argentines: countries that can write a spending cap into the Constituti­on on short notice are also those where it could be just as easily removed. There are good reasons why democracie­s sometimes tie their hands or delegate decision- making. Independen­t central banks or fiscal commission­s, for example, can help government­s overcome the temptation of short- term manipulati­on of the economy at longer- term cost. But Brazil’s spending cap does not look like a sustainabl­e solution. While born of a real sense of fiscal urgency, the biggest risk is that it will eventually fuel political conflict around the ceiling itself, rather than foster deliberati­on about the difficult fiscal choices that must be made.

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 ?? Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/ GT ??
Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/ GT

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