For today's column I hesitated between two issues: the promises
made in a booklet distributed Sunday during the Justice and Development Party
(AK Party) congress, which can be considered the party's new political reform
agenda, and the economic policies debate, the temperature of which has
continued to rise. I decided to opt for the most urgent issue, that is, the
economic policies debate, and to leave my comments on the new agenda for
Friday.
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The answer to the question of “What should be right policy
mix?” which was discussed in my Sept. 24 column “Looking for the right policy
mix,” has become, indeed, a very critical issue about not only the future of
the current adjustment process but also the future of the consensus on the
economic regime put in place in the aftermath of the 2001 crisis and adopted
by the AK Party during its years in government.
When Zafer Çağlayan, the minister of economy, opened the
economic policy debate following the publication of the second quarter gross
domestic product (GDP) figures that confirmed the low growth of the economy,
I wrote in my column “Second quarter confirms worries about low growth”
(Sept. 10) that “there is a serious risk of abandoning the adjustment process
too early,” and I ended my article by saying that it would not be “easy to
decide for the great referee”.
I do not know if it was easy or not for the prime minister
to decide, but it seems that that he took a decision: He backs the fiscal
discipline but insists on the loosening of Turkey's monetary policy. Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan, coming from the business world like Deputy Prime Minister Ali
Babacan and like many other AK Party managers and supporters, believes in the
virtues of a balanced budget. Accumulation of debt frightens him. On every
occasion you can hear him relating gladly the pitiful situation in which
Greece and other southern European countries found themselves because of
long-lasting budget deficits that caused colossal mountains of debt.
Moreover, fiscal discipline is not just a moral attitude
but is a decisive piece in the economic stabilization of the Turkish economy
under AK Party rule. I fully agree with Mehmet Şimşek, the finance minister,
and with Durmuş Yılmaz, the previous governor of the central bank, who each
explained last Friday that decreasing budget deficits decreased both
inflation expectations and inflation itself, as well as real interest rates,
dramatically decreasing in turn interest expenditures. They restated that in
2002, more than 80 percent of tax revenue was allocated to interest payments,
while today this has decreased to around 15 percent. In this achievement, the
decisive role of fiscal discipline is obvious, but let me note that the
global crisis, nowadays called the “Great Recession,” pushed down further the
real interest rates of public debt and they currently remain at 1-2 percent.
The debt burden relief permitted the AK Party to increase public expenditures
without jeopardizing the budget balance so that an impressive improvement of
public services were made possible which, in turn, filled the ballot boxes
with AK Party votes.
So far, so good. Nevertheless, I have a caveat about the
fiscal policy. I support the continuation of fiscal discipline but I have two
objections. The first one is about the size of the deficit. The government
should not insist on the planned 1.5 percent deficit, which is related to 4
percent growth. For a lower growth, which seems to be the case today, a
higher deficit is desirable as long as the debt burden does not increase.
Concretely, this means that a 2.5 percent deficit is quite acceptable. My
second objection is about the quality of the fiscal policy. Limiting public
expenditures must be preferred rather than increasing indirect taxes, which
push inflation up and narrow the space for maneuvering by the central bank
for a controlled relaxing of monetary policy. Of course, it is much easier to
increase indirect taxes than to freeze expenditures, particularly when
elections are in sight.
Currently, the central bank faces increasing pressures
pushing it to loosen monetary policy. Erdoğan made clear that he wants to see
lower interest rates, backing Çağlayan in his battle for stepping on the gas
pedal. But the problem is that by law, the central bank conducts its monetary
policy independently to reach the inflation target, which is set together
with the government. This target is already set at 5 percent, and we are
still far from this level. Getting inflation down obliges the central bank to
avoid either an abrupt depreciation of the Turkish lira or a new boom in
domestic demand. To do this it has to keep the real interest rates low but
positive. This is exactly the case right now. Further attempts at loosening
can easily provoke adverse effects on inflation expectations, causing an
exchange rate shock, as well as increasing market interest rates. If the
disinflation process goes well in the coming months, I am sure the central
bank will envisage relaxing the interest rates.
But I am afraid that the show of strength engaged in by
Çağlayan with the central bank risks questioning the consensus on the current
economic regime based on the low inflation-low budget deficit. Çağlayan made
a dangerous step ahead in the debate by declaring that the central bank is a
bank of the country and thus if it insists on keeping its foot on the brake,
its independence should be discussed. I hope that the aim of Çağlayan is not
questioning the consensus on the economic regime but just the dosage of the
monetary policy.
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3 Ekim 2012 Çarşamba
Not much room to maneuver
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