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Italy needs to focus on productivity growth
Financial Times
06 Maggio 2008
Over
the years, I have observed this about the political economy of economy
reform in Europe: there is an inverse relationship between the number
of objectives and measures of a reform agenda and its ultimate success.
The most successful reform agendas have a single overriding objective
and a short list of measures. The worst are lists with 316 proposals,
as recently published in France, or the 281-page election platform
published by Romano Prodi's centre-left alliance ahead of the 2006
Italian elections. The European Union's verbose Lisbon Agenda falls
into the same category. It is not bad in substance, but lousy in terms
of political economy.
I am moderately optimistic about the future of economy reform in Italy,
primarily because of this inverse relationship. The new administration
has offered no long lists, no convoluted objectives, a few sensible
measures and a few less sensible ones So why should Silvio Berlusconi,
prime minister designate, deliver now when he failed to deliver during
his first two administrations? I share those doubts that others have
expressed on these pages and elsewhere. To push through a reform
agenda, one needs a strategy purpose, solid majorities and the ability
to overcome politicai and administrative obstacles. Mr Berlusconi has
the last two and is probably lacking the first.
But Italy's outgoing administration fared worse on all three counts. Mr
Prodi was elected prime minister on a promise of change. In the end,
his administration managed only two noteworthy reforms. The first are
two Bersani decrees, named after the industry minister, that brought
more competition to the professions and the retail trade. They are not
far-reaching, but should have a moderately positive effect on Italy's
long-run performance. The second is fiscal consolidation, achieved
almost entirely through higher tax revenues. One of the most important
measures was a crackdown on tax evasion. This sounds like an idea
difficult to fault, except that tax evasion has causes that remain in
place. Taxes are as high as in Finland, but the welfare state is less
generous and the qualityy of public services poorer. I am not surprised
Italians have ejected their government under these circumstances.
So what reform priorities should Italy's new government pursue? Italy's
foremost problem is chronically low productivity growth. Since the
start of the decade, Italy's total factor productivity (TFP) - the part
of productivity considered to be the structural component - has
stagnated. The UK, Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands managed TFP
growth rates of dose to 1 per cent. In fairness, Italy did have some
success raising employment, but this improvement unfortunately carne
entirely at the expense of productivity growth. Without an improvement
in TFP, I cannot see how Italy can prosper in the eurozone in the long
run or reduce its high levels of public debt. So the TFP growth problem
needs to be fixed with utmost priority.
Most of Italy's abysmal productivity performance is concentrated in the
public sector, one of Europe's most expensive and least efficient.
Neither the centre-left nor the centre-right offers an agenda of
full-scale reform, but the centre-right is marginally more ambitious,
promising to abolish entire layers of public administration and with
this the excessively large number of people who make a living in
politics. Given its high level of public debt, Italy is not in a
position to pay off inefficient public sector workers as part of a
radical overhaul. The Prodi government tried a consensual approach and
got nowhere, Without the willingness to confront the public sector
trade unions, there will be no substantial reform.
A priority within the public sector is education.
Italy has abysmally low educational scores in international
comparisons, due not to a lack of public spending but the setting of
wrong priorities, and the acceptance of restrictive practices by
teachers. An intriguing recent study by the Centro Europa Ricerche*
found that rates of TFP growth in the EU correlated strongly with an
ability to speak English. Why should this be? English is the dominant
language of the internet and some economists have attributed increases
in TFP growth to how countries use information and communication
technologies.
According to Eurostat, the EU's statistics office, 56 per cent of
respondents in Italy in 2005 had never used a computer and 72 per cent
had never used the internet. A vast number of Italians are, in effect,
not participating in the 21st century. The situation is gradually
improving as broadband internet becomes more available, but Italy still
has a long way to catch up.
These issues would be my priorities. Tackling them would get Italy
further than any 100-pointlist; and allow the Berlusconi government to
do ali the stupid things it is going to do in any case with some
impunity.
Source > Financial Times
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