How do we count the cost of fiscal austerity? The most obvious
question to ask, at least for a macroeconomist, is how much higher GDP would be
without it. This is what Oscar Jorda and Alan Taylor did in
some recent research, which I discussed in this post. All I did in my post was translate this
percentage into the amount of output lost per household, because I think that
kind of number is easier for non-economists to relate to.
Many macroeconomists today might point out that this is an
overestimate of the true cost of austerity, because to the extent that we are
collectively producing less because we are working less, we should offset this
GDP number with the benefit of the extra leisure we are enjoying.
Many other people, including I hope some macroeconomists, might
think that was just silly, and gets things the
wrong way round. To the extent that this fall in GDP is associated with a rise
in unemployment, that increase in unemployment does much more harm than the
amount of goods that unemployed person might otherwise have produced. Chris
Dillow has a useful post on this, and the evidence is in my view
overwhelming. Exactly why macroeconomists continue to get this backwards will
have to be the subject of another post.
David Stuckler, who is in the sociology department
at Oxford but who I do not think I have ever met, looks more generally at the
impact of austerity on health. Together with Sanjay Basu from Stanford, they
have written a book called ‘The Body Economic: Why Austerity
Kills’. There is a NYT OpEd by them here, a Mark Thoma synopsis here, and for those who like podcasts an
interview (with transcript) here. What Stuckler and Basu do is essentially
cross examine a large amount of health data across countries and across time,
looking at the relationship between recessions and particular austerity
measures with health, including deaths. The examples are varied and interesting:
for example how improvements in child mortality and reductions in tuberculosis
and whooping cough in the 1930s were correlated with the extent to which state
governors embraced Roosevelt’s New Deal (will we see the same with Obamacare?),
to how HIV has increased and malaria returned to Greece as a result of health
cutbacks.
Of course what we are talking about here are particular forms
of fiscal tightening: cuts to welfare and health programmes in particular, but
more generally measures that hit the vulnerable poor rather than the rich. A
programme to reduce government deficits that only involved increasing taxes on
the reasonably well off would have a far less serious impact on health. Their
book is also about how best to use public money to most effectively improve
health outcomes, and how cutting this money in the short term not only has a
negative impact on health, but can also raise costs in the longer run.
For this reason, it would be pointless to say that X amount of
fiscal contraction leads on average to some Y deterioration in health outcomes.
Nevertheless, the frustration the authors clearly feel is self evident. Talking
of the UK government’s new regime for disability testing, they say “It was hard
for us, as public health researchers, to understand the government’s position.
The Department for Work and Pensions, after all, considered cheating a
relatively minor issue.” Talking more generally of austerity, David Stuckler says: “These are massive uncontrolled
experiments with entire populations. Had austerity been organised like a drug
trial, with a board of ethics, it would have been discontinued, given evidence
of its deadly side-effects and the failure of its purported economic benefits
to accrue.”
Now some might say that because austerity need not necessarily
involve measures that have large negative health outcomes, statements like
this, and indeed the title of their book, is alarmist. This is similar to the
Troika saying that they are quite right to insist on fiscal contraction so that
the interest on Greek loans can be repaid, because it is up to the Greek
government how it chooses to reduce its deficit. Typically, however, the same
people who make that kind of excuse are also those who want to direct austerity
to cutting spending rather than raising taxes, and who complain about the
‘burden’ of social programmes.
Let me end by quoting the conclusion of their New York Times
article. “One need not be an economic ideologue — we certainly aren’t — to
recognize that the price of austerity can be calculated in human lives. We are
not exonerating poor policy decisions of the past or calling for universal debt
forgiveness. It’s up to policy makers in America and Europe to figure out the
right mix of fiscal and monetary policy. What we have found is that austerity —
severe, immediate, indiscriminate cuts to social and health spending — is not
only self-defeating, but fatal.”
I do think that such studies overstate the case against austerity. Moreover, they are not needed, as the case is actually pretty solid. You cannot make one see what he does not want to see.
ReplyDeleteBut I do think that this can be really misleading, and completely off the point. And I also think this envolves some confusion between correlation and causality. Maybe there are some indirect impacts, but they cannot be seen as costs of austerity.
Not that any of this that I just said matters, as obviously these are not the arguments that shall matter. But it is probably worth mentioning somehow.
If these relationships are not causal, then what is the cause of the health effects observed? There is plenty of direct evidence of the health effects (separately) of poverty, unemployment and stress, so why are you so sceptical about the possibility of observing this at a macro level?
ReplyDeleteEspecially in the South countries have had a lifestyle that was and is unsustainable/unaffordable.
ReplyDeleteAnyway it is hard to see how the present healthcare system could survive till say 2050. Costs are rapidly rising and the government have simply no grip on it.
Anyway seen the amounts presently available (both percentage od GDP as well as budget per capita) it still should be very easy to have a proper healthcare system. That they havenot is mainly a management problem (well the total lack thereof of proper one at least).
They could start with dropping the European 'religion like' free healthcare. Simply makes costs much higher without any better healthcare results (have a look at the Portland (somewhere there at least) research). Free btw as in pay for nothing.
Stop with closed shop healthcare occupations. And effectively for Greece (and Italy as well, but in another way) donot stimulate (re-) export of medicines.
Malaria is an enviromental issue. HIV is likely caused by protection fatigue and much better medication. Awful examples.
This might be the incentive to do something about it. No way that under normal circumstances these problems would be attacked. In soft boiled egg states you need a shock event before there is change. Imho likely a problem that even under normal circumstances would have occured but only later.
Main problem is imho unemployment you get a new generation of structurally unemployed (aka basketcases). Simply a poor quality workforce in a few years. Hardly helps to become competitive whatever the production costs barometer says.
Looking forward to hearing from you as to why macroeconomists have this so backwards. :-)
ReplyDelete“These are massive uncontrolled experiments with entire populations. Had austerity been organised like a drug trial, with a board of ethics, it would have been discontinued, given evidence of its deadly side-effects and the failure of its purported economic benefits to accrue.”
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, in practise, medical research has often failed to maintain decent scientific and ethical standards (examples can be found at sciencebasedmedicine.org), but in principle the (UK) 'austerity experiment' wouldn't have been allowed to begin. It was about as rational and ethical as a farcically incompetently designed clinical trial of blood-letting for the treatment of anaemia or radium water for the prevention of cancer would be.