Transatlantic Austerity 2010-13. A Comparative Assessment, di Roberto Tamborini, LUISS Guido Carli - School of European Political Economy, Working Paper 4/2014
Drawing on a large data collection, this paper offers a comprehensive
assessment of fiscal austerity in twenty major countries in the Transatlantic
area in the aftermath of the Great Recession of 2008-09. Countries include
the twelve early Euro members, six other members of the European Union,
and the two North-American countries. The paper is organized in two parts.
First, an index of austerity is proposed based on the contraction of the public
sector's net contribution to the economy. Then, there follows an assessment
of austerity under the two dimensions of the improvement of public finances
and interest rates, and of the collateral effects on economic activity and
employment. The assessment is accompanied by reasoned discussion of the
theoretical motivations and underpinnings of fiscal austerity and relevant
criticisms. The main conclusion is that austerity in general has so far
missed its promised goals, for 1) except budget deficits, public finances have
further deteriorated, 2) countries under stronger austerity have achieved
neither consolidation nor faster recovery but rather lower shock absorption,
worse recovery performances, and higher unemployment. Claims that
austerity failures are due to country-specific factors, such as mistakes in
implementation and pre-crisis structural weaknesses, are not supported by
robust evidence.
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