Macroeconomic Performance, Opportunities, and Challenges
9
Box 1.1: Countercyclical Fiscal Policy
Resource-rich developing countries (RRDCs) such as Uzbekistan are typically
subjected to volatile commodity prices, which to a large extent drive the business
cycle in such countries. Empirical studies suggest that fiscal policy in developing
countries, and particularly RRDCs, typically is pro-cyclical (Kaminsky et al. 2005,
Kraay and Serven 2013). This means that spending expands in times of resource
booms and contracts during busts. Such a spending pattern both prolongs and
amplifies economic expansions and recessions, which can lead to macroeconomic
instability. By contrast, counter-cyclical fiscal policy would be beneficial. Indeed,
empirical evidence suggests that counter-cyclical fiscal spending dampens
business cycles and reduces the probability of a prolonged economic crisis (Ostry
et al. 2010).
Moreover, pro-cyclical fiscal policy may indirectly have an adverse impact on long-
run economic growth. Countries with high output volatility tend to experience
lower economic growth (Ramey and Ramey 1995). Another possible channel is
through the so-called Dutch Disease: excessive growth in fiscal spending during
booms leads to further erosion of the manufacturing sector’s competitiveness.
The development literature often argues that manufacturing is special due to
the positive externalities that are not present in other areas of economic activity
(Rodrik 2008). While whether such externalities exist in practice remains unclear
(Eichengreen 2008; Schroder 2017), there is evidence that small states benefit
from export diversification through lower output volatility (McIntyre et al. 2018).
Uzbekistan’s fiscal policy compares favorably with that of other RRDCs and
countries in the region. For example, Kazakhstan and the Kyrgyz Republic, two
neighboring countries, have among the most pro-cyclical fiscal policies in the world
(Aizenman et al. 2018). In these economies, estimated cyclicality is above 1, i.e.,
for every 1% increase in gross domestic product, government spending grows by
more than 1%. Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, two peer RRDCs, also display an
estimated cyclicality of greater than 1. The Uzbek authorities, by contrast, increase
fiscal spending by only 0.5% for every 1% increase in the annual gross domestic
product growth rate, which, when compared internationally, is moderate.
Nevertheless, moving toward a more counter-cyclical spending would be
beneficial. Other Asian countries, some of them also rich in natural resources
(such as Brunei Darussalam, Bhutan, Cambodia, and Sri Lanka) on average,
decrease fiscal spending when output increases. Uzbekistan should gradually
follow suit to reap the benefits.
Sources: Aizenman et al. 2018, Eichengreen 2008, Kaminsky et al. 2005, Kraay and Serven 2013, McIntyre
et al. 2018, Ostry et al. 2010, Ramey and Ramey 1995, Rodrik 2008, Schroder 2017.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |