Adjustment in Euro Area Deficit Countries: Progress, Challenges, and Policies
Thierry Tressel,
Shengzu Wang,
Joong Kang,
Jay Shambaugh,
Jörg Decressin and
Petya Brooks
No 2014/007, IMF Staff Discussion Notes from International Monetary Fund
Abstract:
Imbalances within the euro area have been a defining feature of the crisis. This paper provides a critical analysis of the ongoing rebalancing of euro area “deficit economies” (Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain) that accumulated large current account deficits and external liability positions in the run-up to the crisis. It shows that relative price adjustments have been proceeding gradually. Real effective exchange rates have depreciated by 10-25 percent, driven largely by reductions in unit labor costs due to labor shedding. While exports have typically rebounded, subdued demand accounts for much of the reduction in current account deficits. Hence, the current account balance of the euro area as a whole has shifted into surplus. Internal rebalancing has come with subdued activity—notably very high unemployment in the deficit economies—and made continued adjustment more difficult. To advance rebalancing further, the paper emphasizes the need for: (1) macroeconomic policies that support demand and bring inflation in line with the ECB’s medium-term price stability objective; (2) continued EMU reforms (banking union) to ensure proper financial intermediation; and (3) structural reforms in product and labor markets to improve productivity and support the reallocation of resources to tradable sectors.
Keywords: SDN; deficit country; deficit economy; area country; countries vis-à-vis; financial system; labor market; Euro Area; Crisis; Current account; Rebalancing; Competitiveness; External stability; Structural reforms; Potential output; Current account deficits; Output gap; Price adjustments; Global (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 34
Date: 2014-07-14
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