{"title":"EMU Fiscal Rules: A New Answer to an Old Question?","authors":"Fabrizio Balassone, D. Franco","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.2094456","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"EMU fiscal rules aim at ensuring sound fiscal policies in EU Member States while allowing sufficient margins for stabilisation policy. The Treaty of Maastricht and the Stability and Growth Pact introduced a detailed framework of rules, surveillance procedures and sanctions that are tighter than those generally applying in federal countries. In this paper we try to assess to what extent the issue facing the founders of EMU was a new one in the field of public finance and to what extent the solution chosen can be regarded as innovative. To this end, we review the literature on budgetary rules from its very beginning to the years immediately before the Treaty of Maastricht. We consider the arguments brought forward to justify EMU fiscal rules and the novel feature of the problem faced at the EU level, represented by the interaction between its multinational nature and the lack of a political authority of federal rank. The solutions chosen, while drawing heavily on ideas that were central in the debate on fiscal rules, reflect this new aspect of the problem. The highly decentralised setting of fiscal policy in EMU gave prominence to moral hazard issues; it is probably at the roots of the rejection of both the dual budget approach and the distinction between ordinary and extraordinary finance; it motivated the adoption of a detailed multilateral surveillance procedure and the introduction of a predetermined limit for the annual deficit in a framework that envisages the targeting of a balanced budget over the cycle.","PeriodicalId":102995,"journal":{"name":"2001 Fiscal Rules Conference (Archive)","volume":"46 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2001-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"37","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"2001 Fiscal Rules Conference (Archive)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2094456","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 37
Abstract
EMU fiscal rules aim at ensuring sound fiscal policies in EU Member States while allowing sufficient margins for stabilisation policy. The Treaty of Maastricht and the Stability and Growth Pact introduced a detailed framework of rules, surveillance procedures and sanctions that are tighter than those generally applying in federal countries. In this paper we try to assess to what extent the issue facing the founders of EMU was a new one in the field of public finance and to what extent the solution chosen can be regarded as innovative. To this end, we review the literature on budgetary rules from its very beginning to the years immediately before the Treaty of Maastricht. We consider the arguments brought forward to justify EMU fiscal rules and the novel feature of the problem faced at the EU level, represented by the interaction between its multinational nature and the lack of a political authority of federal rank. The solutions chosen, while drawing heavily on ideas that were central in the debate on fiscal rules, reflect this new aspect of the problem. The highly decentralised setting of fiscal policy in EMU gave prominence to moral hazard issues; it is probably at the roots of the rejection of both the dual budget approach and the distinction between ordinary and extraordinary finance; it motivated the adoption of a detailed multilateral surveillance procedure and the introduction of a predetermined limit for the annual deficit in a framework that envisages the targeting of a balanced budget over the cycle.
欧洲货币联盟财政规则旨在确保欧盟成员国实行健全的财政政策,同时为稳定政策留出足够的余地。《马斯特里赫特条约》(Treaty of Maastricht)和《稳定与增长公约》(Stability and Growth Pact)引入了详细的规则框架、监督程序和制裁措施,比一般适用于联邦制国家的更为严格。在本文中,我们试图评估欧洲货币联盟创始人所面临的问题在多大程度上是公共财政领域的一个新问题,以及所选择的解决方案在多大程度上可以视为创新。为此目的,我们审查了关于预算规则的文献,从一开始一直到《马斯特里赫特条约》签订之前的几年。我们考虑了为证明欧洲货币联盟财政规则的合理性而提出的论点,以及欧盟层面面临的问题的新特征,其跨国性质与缺乏联邦级别的政治权威之间的相互作用。所选择的解决方案,虽然在很大程度上借鉴了财政规则辩论中的核心观点,但也反映了问题的这个新方面。欧洲货币联盟高度分散的财政政策背景突出了道德风险问题;这可能是拒绝双重预算方法和区分普通财政和特别财政的根源;它促使通过一项详细的多边监督程序,并在设想在周期内实现预算平衡的框架内,对年度赤字实行预定限额。