Argument 2: The Idea of a Structural Deficit is a Myth
The idea that government deficits are structural
is unhelpful. The assumption is that governments have to borrow more because of the gap between
income and expenditure but how certain can we be that the only reason governments are borrowing
money is simply due to the changes to public finances wrought by the recession? The whole notion of a
structural deficit assumes that it is the amount governments borrow when the economy is operating at
its trend level. This implies that to measure it we need to know how far the economy is operating below
trend – the output gap.
The problem is that there is considerable disagreement on the size of the output gap. It is accepted that
the recession will have destroyed some potential output but how much is open to some interpretation.
There have been a number of studies attempting to quantify the impact of economic downturns on the
output gap and the outcomes vary significantly. In the UK the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has estim-
ated that the output loss of the economic downturn from 2008 could be as much as 7.5 per cent whereas
the Treasury estimates 5 per cent and other estimates put the gap as low as 2 per cent.
The size of the output gap is important because it has a direct effect on the cyclical component of the
deficit – the larger the output gap the larger will be the cyclical component and the smaller the structural.
This in turn affects any estimates of the size of borrowing when the economy does return to trend – in
other words, the size of the structural deficit. Any calculations on the deficit would also be subject to
assumptions about the sensitivity of taxes and spending to changes in GDP. How does tax revenue rise in
relation to changes in GDP? This will depend in part on assumptions about the number of people who are
able to find work as the economy expands but also on the extent to which potential output has been des-
troyed. How do changes in government spending vary in relation to changes in GDP? How many people
will get off benefits and what effect will short-term fiscal stimulus measures have on spending?
As an increasing number of assumptions are made, calculations of the size of the structural deficit
could be very different; which one should be used as the basis for policy decisions? In the light of this
analysis is it useful to think of the idea of a structural deficit at all?
SELF TEST
Explain why inaccurate information might affect forecasts of economic growth and thus the size
of government budget deficits.
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