Growth and Competitiveness as Factors of Eurozone External Imbalances : Evidence and Policy Implications
The paper assesses the contribution of key factors associated with external imbalances in the Eurozone through the estimation of a panel-data vector autoregressive model over 1975-2011. Growth fluctuations, initially associated with demand booms tr...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/12/18717042/growth-competitiveness-factors-eurozone-external-imbalances-evidence-policy-implications http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16900 |
Summary: | The paper assesses the contribution of
key factors associated with external imbalances in the
Eurozone through the estimation of a panel-data vector
autoregressive model over 1975-2011. Growth fluctuations,
initially associated with demand booms triggered by
unusually low interest rates and later with demand
contractions resulting from the crisis and policy
adjustments, have been key drivers of current account
fluctuations. Changes in competitiveness, measured by real
exchange rates or unit labor costs, have played a less
important role. Demand shocks have contributed more to
current account balance dynamics in the Eurozone periphery
than in the core, whereas competitiveness has been a less
prominent factor in the periphery but relatively more
important in the core. Changes in competitiveness are
positively associated with changes in growth. Preventing
imbalances from building up in a context of growing
financial integration and easy finance warrants enhanced
mutual surveillance of fiscal imbalances, but also better
regulation of credit markets to prevent excess leverage and
concentration of lending in investments prone to speculative
bubbles. Coordination of fiscal policy across the Eurozone
would facilitate the management of external imbalances
without placing an often unwarranted burden on fiscal
tightening in countries with sound fiscal positions affected
by credit booms. The policies of internal devaluation
implemented in the periphery, aimed at promoting external
competitiveness, may have had only limited effectiveness in
restoring the external balance to equilibrium. |
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