When
the IMF undertakes an Article IV mission, they publish a preliminary report at
the end of their visit, and a full report a couple of months later. I wrote
about their preliminary report in May, and today we have the final version. So
for the second night running I’ve stayed up too late reading
IMF material. While not quite a page-turner, this report is full of good stuff.
I’ve
already mentioned
the pessimistic near term outlook for growth. What is just as depressing is
their view that “the output gap is projected to remain large for an extended
period and not close until 2018.” What is more, they are quite clear that “the
risks to the baseline are predominately to the downside” – that means their
assessment is more likely to be too optimistic rather than too pessimistic. As
a result, they conclude “A more supportive macroeconomic policy stance is hence
essential”, with none of the usual ifs and buts.
Their
recommendations of monetary policy are extensive and detailed. They note that “monetary
and credit conditions remain tight due to elevated risk aversion and rising
bank funding costs”. They recommend reducing interest rates from 0.5% to 0.25%.
They note that “standard rules-of-thumb suggest that cutting the policy rate by
25 basis points could boost growth by 0.1-0.2 percentage points—perhaps
equivalent to fiscal stimulus of 0.2-0.4 percent of GDP”, but they suggest that
may be an underestimate in current circumstances.
Their final paragraph on monetary policy is
worth quoting in full. “The government has also announced that it is
considering expanding government guarantees (for a fee) to fund large,
privately operated infrastructure projects. Boosting infrastructure spending
would support growth, given its high multiplier and ability to increase productive
capacity. However, it is important that the choice of projects and the
modalities of their operation (public versus private) and financing (e.g.,
issuing public debt versus guarantees) be based on efforts to use public funds
as efficiently as possible. Such decisions should not be affected by artificial
attempts to limit government gross debt or near-term expenditure by
transforming costs into contingent liabilities that might be realized only
later.” I couldn’t agree
more.
The IMF estimate that fiscal “consolidation
has so far reduced GDP by a cumulative 2½ percent.” Their multipliers look a
little low to me, but its good to have some numbers out there. They note that
the government has over the last year tried to change the fiscal mix to promote
growth, but “the macroeconomic impact of such measures is likely to be modest”,
and it recommends that more should be done.
The report is quite clear that
if growth does not pick up, the Chancellor’s deficit reduction plan should be
abandoned. Jonathan Portes has already highlighted
why the IMF believes this would not lead to adverse market reaction. It also
raises the question about why they do not recommend short term fiscal stimulus
under their baseline, which is hardly rosy. The answer may lie in Annex 3,
which simulates exactly this under various different assumptions on hysteresis
and multipliers. How they do this looks slightly odd to me, but hopefully I can
investigate this further at a later stage.
There is much more interesting
detail in the report, such as an expectation of further significant falls in
house prices, and a view that Sterling is modestly overvalued at present. But
the main message is pretty clear. They say “unemployment is still too high.
Activity is expected to gain
modest
momentum going forward, but additional macroeconomic easing is needed to close
the
output gap
faster, reduce the risks of hysteresis, and insure against the predominance of
downside
risks.”
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