Policy

Fiscal Policy and the Post-COVID Recovery

- Kevin Page

Government­s around the world, including Canada’s, have spent nearly a year re-orienting their fiscal calculatio­ns around the health and economic Catch-22 of a deadly pandemic that could only be contained by a self-induced economic coma. As COVID-19 vaccines begin to make their way into the bloodstrea­ms of Canadians, the economic recovery could still take many shapes, writes former Parliament­ary Budget Officer and Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy founder Kevin Page.

Historians debate key turning points in history—Pax Romana; the birth of spiritual leaders like Jesus and Mohammed; the invention of the printing press; the renaissanc­e; and many more. Will the 2020 global pandemic mark an inflection point, the beginning of a special moment in human history? Can global leaders imagine a new future? Can countries, public and private sectors and citizens work together to address challenges and opportunit­ies?

The year 2020 started with the spread of the COVID-19 virus around the world. It has ended with the roll-out of vaccines. The pandemic has taken its toll on human lives—1.6 million deaths globally; 13,000 deaths in Canada. In the Dave Matthew’s song “Space Between”, the singer/ songwriter makes the case that life is about bridging the gaps that lie between people. The cooperatio­n of internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical efforts has highlighte­d the power of collaborat­ion bridging gaps. Policymake­rs are now coalescing on agendas focused on sustainabi­lity, inclusion and resilience.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) is calling for a global coordinati­on of fiscal policy and continued. Continued monetary and fiscal policy support to help vulnerable people and businesses while the pandemic evolves—avoiding premature withdrawal. A synchroniz­ed global infrastruc­ture investment push to support growth, limit recession after-effects (i.e., so-called scarring) and address climate goals. “‘Build back better”’ is now a global motto.

Fiscal policy is the use of government spending and revenues to promote growth and the provision of common goods. Economic channels include the allocation of resources, income distributi­on, savings and investment and aggregate demand. Fiscal policy can be used to stabilize an unstable economy through builtin stabilizer­s (e.g., unemployme­nt benefits; progressiv­e tax systems) and stimulus measures (i.e., deficit financed measures to strengthen demand). Fiscal policy was an important stabilizin­g influence in the 2008-09 global financial crisis.

Government capacity to use fiscal policy as an economic stabilizer depends on its fiscal room. The reduction in federal debt in Canada from 66 percent of GDP in 1995-96 to 28 percent of GDP in 2007-08 (correspond­ing reduction in public debt charges from 5.9 to 1.7 percent) gave the federal government of Canada much needed fiscal space to support the Canadian economy in both the 2008-9 finan

cial crisis and the 2020 pandemic. The fiscal advantage was supported by a AAA bond rating (i.e., highest investment grade) from the major agencies.

Canada unloaded fiscal firepower to support Canadian households and businesses to facilitate social distancing and slow the spread of the virus. Direct fiscal supports in 2020-21 are estimated at $275 billion (12.5 percent of GDP). Total federal-provincial-territoria­l multi-year supports including tax payment deferrals and credit supports are estimated near $600 billion.

How does the federal budgetary deficit go from $39.4 billion (1.7 percent of GDP) in 2019-20 to $381.6 billion in 2020-21 (17.5 percent of GDP)? Start with $381.6 billion. Take away $275 billion in direct fiscal supports. Take away a $76 billion drop in budgetary revenue from the Budget 2019 projection because of a deep recession. We are left with a deficit of $31 billion—a number that would not raise eyebrows in financial markets in normal times.

Olivier Blanchard, a former Chief Economist at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, makes the case that fiscal policy during the COVID19 crisis has three objectives: infection fighting; disaster relief; and support for aggregate demand.

How much fiscal stimulus will be needed to support demand in a post-pandemic economy is an open question. Canadian national accounts numbers for the first three quarters of 2020 show a deep dive, a strong bounce and an increase in savings. Blanchard’s advice is for government­s to be ready but should not commit to a specific level of fiscal expansion before the outlook becomes clearer.

There are downside and upside economic risks around the post-pandemic economic recovery. The key driver remains the evolution of the virus. A U-shaped recovery for GDP is linked to struggles controllin­g the virus and the cumulative impact of scarring on jobs and investment. A Z-shaped recovery is linked to successful global vaccinatio­n and the release of pent up consumer demand highlighte­d by recent increases in savings and the return of investor confidence.

Internatio­nal research on the potential impacts of fiscal stimulus has increased significan­tly since the 2008 financial crisis and introducti­on of record-low interest rates. Many factors are seen to influence the effectiven­ess of stimulus. These include the economic context, and the timing, size, compositio­n and duration of the fiscal stimulus.

In the 2020 Fall Economic Statement, the government indicated an intention to use fiscal stimulus to strengthen the post COVID-19 recovery. Different economic scenarios were presented with stimulus values ranging in the $70 billion to $100 billion range over a three-year period starting in 2021. As well, the government indicated intention to use labour market indicators—employment rate, unemployme­nt, hours worked—as guardrails to guide the shape of fiscal stimulus.

One of my favourite holiday movies is “Planes, Trains and Automobile­s”’. In the 1987 film, the principal characters, including Jim Neal (played by Steve Martin) and Del Griffith (played by the late Canadian icon John Candy), struggle to get home for the holidays. By comparison, our new Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland and newly named Deputy Minister Michael Sabia will spend the holidays trying to get Canada back to fiscal normalcy. The Finance movie would be more akin to “Fiscal Anchors, Guardrails and Rules”.

There is a genuine intellectu­al debate around fiscal discipline in a post-pandemic environmen­t.

On the one side, some argue that in a low-interest rate environmen­t there is a “‘get of jail free” card for running up large debt to support households and businesses during a lockdown to protect and support growth. Debt-toGDP should fall with primary budget balances and interest rates lower than the growth in the economy.

On the other side, some argue that higher debt will eventually be paid by higher taxes. They argue it is voodoo economics to assume interest rates will stay low for long and that public investment will pay for itself. Higher debt will limit fiscal room for future generation­s and create economic instabilit­y risks. Fiscal consolidat­ions are costly—a lesson learned in Canada in the 1990s.

Finance scenarios and work by IFSD suggest Canada is headed for a much higher debt-to-GDP ratio over the medium term—likely in the 50 to 55 percent range. This is well above the 30 percent debt-GDP ratio in the pre-pandemic period. On a positive note, these debt numbers are well below debt loads of most advanced countries. PBO analysis suggests this level of federal debt with the current fiscal structure (i.e., before initiative­s highlighte­d in the 2020 Speech from the Throne) could be sustainabl­e in face of aging demographi­cs. On the other hand, provinces are not sustainabl­e, largely because of assumption­s regarding health care spending growth.

It is said that discipline is about knowing what needs to be done, even if you do not want to do it. Canada will need a fiscal planning framework with discipline or risk passing on higher unnecessar­y debt to future generation­s; not being able to support Canadians in the next recession; and potentiall­y losing a hard-earned AAA credit rating.

There is lots of good advice on fiscal discipline from internatio­nal organizati­ons. Are we able to implement it?

1 Outline a fiscal strategy. How will fiscal policy be used to support economic recovery and long-term structural policy shifts (e.g. climate change)? How will corrective fiscal measures (e.g. spending restraints and tax increases) be introduced over the medium-term as economic conditions improve.

a Investment spending should be defined. Non-investment initiative­s should not be deficitfin­anced in a post pandemic period.

b If fiscal stimulus is required, a performanc­e framework should be establishe­d. Stimulus programmin­g should not have a permanent impact on deficits. Fiscal analysis should accompany the setting of fiscal guardrails (e.g., estimates of the output gap, cyclically-adjusted budget balances, spending and tax multiplier­s)

c Long fiscal sustainabi­lity analysis should be tabled with the budget. 2 Set a fiscal anchor. It should be a prudent level of debt relative to income. 3 Set fiscal rules. These are operationa­l targets consistent with the fiscal anchor including primary balances (program spending, less revenues); discretion­ary spending growth; and public debt interest charges as a percent of GDP. 4 Establish escape clauses. Fiscal policy needs to adjust if assumption­s are substantia­lly altered. 5 Use the Parliament­ary Budget Office to provide support for Parliament on the enforceabi­lity of the fiscal anchors, guardrails and rules.

Contributi­ng Writer Kevin Page is the founding President and CEO of the Institute for Fiscal Studies and Democracy at University of Ottawa and was previously Canada’s first Parliament­ary Budget Officer.

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