The Johan Cruijff principle

Besides being one of the best soccer players of all times, Johan Cruijff is also a sage who spouts wise platitudes in a heavy Amsterdam accent. One of them is that every downside has an upside.

The economy is contracting rapidly. This is bad. However, greenhouse gas emissions are also contracting rapidly. This is good.

The EPA will today announce that we will be much closer to our Kyoto targets than previously thought. See Harry McGee’s piece in the Irish Times. This means that we will not have to spend all of the 270 million euro that is reserved for importing emission permits. Every little bit helps.

The details in today’s announcement are of historical interest. The latest EPA emissions projection is based on an ESRI economic projection of mid January.* How times flies. Back then, we thought that cumulative contraction would be 7% between 2008 and 2010. If only.

Should anyone want to update the emission projections, the output elasticity of CO2 is about 0.7 while the output elasticity of all greenhouse gas is about 0.5.

*We also projected emissions at the same time. See another piece by McGee.

Designing the ‘Mini’ Budget

Jim O’Leary provides an extensive analysis of the options for this not-so-mini budget here.

NESC report advocates integrated national response to the crisis

The NESC has just produced a paper Ireland’s Five-Part Crisis: An Integrated National Response which sets out to assist government in developing an integrated response to the current crisis. The paper stresses the urgency of a holistic and joined-up plan within which we can see how the individual measures required to get us out of the problems we are in relate together. It is hard to argue with this proposition, even if we are a long way from seeing a recognisable plan from the authorities at this point in time.

The paper deliberately eschews making specific policy recommendations (p. 9), though some are discussed in an appendix to the paper. Its argument is that the more important task at this stage is to gain agreement around an overall analysis of the problem and a vision of the way forward. However, while the paper contains many useful insights and observations, my overall impression is that it remains too rhetorical and would have benefited from a harder edge, perhaps in the form of some specific targets to address some of the key imbalances which it identifies.

The paper has a short but useful overview of the position in which Ireland now finds itself and how we got here. It goes on to argue that there are five dimensions to Ireland’s current crisis:

  • A banking crisis
  • A fiscal crisis
  • An economic crisis
  • A social crisis
  • A reputational crisis

The core argument of the paper is that partial, piecemeal and sequential responses to these individual crises will not be sufficient or effective. This is only partly because of the inter-relationships between these individual dimensions of the crisis, but largely because citizens need to be able to see how any sacrifices they are asked to bear fit into the overall response to the crisis.

A key feature of a recovery plan is some statement of how the government intends to allocate the inevitable costs of adjustment across groups in the population, and the mechanisms for achieving this. Beyond some well-meaning statements on the need for social solidarity, the paper is silent on this issue.

The paper’s own list of desirable elements in a recovery plan (p. 40) are very high-level and fail largely to address the distributional issues which will be key to its public acceptability. It is also disappointing that the paper does not address more directly some of the operational issues on which economic and political opinion remains divided, e.g. the optimal balance and speed between addressing the yawning fiscal deficit and maintaining domestic demand, or how to bring about the required adjustments in nominal wages and prices to restore competitiveness.

To be fair, the paper states that it did not set out to get into  this level of detail, and it is more of an essay than a plan. But a plan is needed, and it is to be hoped that the government can produce it in the context of its budget measures on April 7th next.

Deflation Once Again

The CPI has fallen 1.0% sa in February and 3.9% in the four months since the turn in October (versus 4.4% unadjusted). HICP is down 1.1% sa in the three months since its later turn in November. The HICP fall of 0.6% sa in February is its largest to date. The difference between the two is mainly mortgage interest – owner-occupied housing costs are excluded from the HICP.

Year-on-year carryover in the CPI (what the year’s avg for 09 would be versus 08 if there is no further change from Feb) is now -2.7%. At Budget time in October, the expectation was for about +2.5%, so a prospective gap has already opened up of over 5% against Budget-time expectations, even if there are no further CPI falls. The recent ECB cut would have been too late for the March CPI (taken on second Tuesday) but will impact April, as will electricity and gas price reductions. If there are excise duty increases on April 7th., they would be just in time to impact April figs also. It is difficult to know if the currency appreciation against sterling has passed through yet, and there could be some increased outlet substitution bias problems for the CSO to grapple with. Overall there could be some further monthly falls, but the 1%-per-month drop in the CPI can hardly continue for long.

For 5 marks: What would the Budget in October have contained had the Minister known what was going to happen to CPI inflation?

Deutsche Bank on the Irish Economy

Deutsche Bank have an online summary analysis of the problems facing the Irish economy (hat tip Turbulence Ahead).  Overall, it provides a reasonable account of the current situation.   However, it does perpetuate the misleading impression that the the scale of the Irish banking system is extraordinarily large relative to its GDP.  As has been noted repeatedly on this blog and elsewhere in the domestic media,  the aggregate statistics are dominated by the ‘pure offshore’ activities of international banks at the IFSC, with the ‘domestic’ component of the banking system large but not to this ‘off the charts’ extent.