Spanish life is not always likeable but it is
compellingly loveable.
- Christopher
Howse: A Pilgrim in Spain.
Spain
- This is surely a sign of the (internet) times
- I've been known to say that the Spanish have 3 very recognisable traits: 1. Loudness; 2. Imperviousness to high ambient noise levels, and 3. Unawareness of the presence of others. At least 2 of these were in play yesterday when the woman at the next table to me spent 20 minutes screaming at her mother for interfering in her personal agonias. As for the willingness to talk loudly about your personal life in all its gory detail, a (half) Spanish friend last night suggested that this was not looked upon here is it is in other cultures, because the filters the Spanish have against surrounding loud noise prevents them from listening in on the conversations. In other words, they talk loudly about personal matters because they're confident no one will be listening to them. Unless they're a guiri, of course.
- I had a vague memory of there being a law here under which you can exceed the speed limit so as to overtake. And so there is. It's Article 51 of the Reglamento General de Circulación and it says: The maximum fixed speeds for conventional roads which do not pass through urban areas may only be exceeded by up to 20kph by saloon cars and motorcycles whilst overtaking vehicles travelling at lesser speeds. But . . . It doesn't apply 1. on motorways or dual carriageways; 2. in towns or cities; 3. where there's a No Overtaking sign; and 4. where there's a stated speed limit. In fact, it applies only to 'conventional roads' ( i. e. single-lane roads), where there's no central reservation and no speed signs. So, does anyone know of a road in Spain where it does apply? Maybe some rural track where you might meet tractors.
- As I occasionally pass through Asturias, I really would like to know the name of the doctors mentioned here.
The EU
- Last week, the EU introduced a truly spectacular piece of regulation. “Mifid 2” is its name and it weighs in at a princely 7,000 pages. That’s 1.4m paragraphs, or six Bible-lengths. It must surely be a contender for the longest piece of red tape ever. The purpose of the 'Markets In Financial Instruments Directive II' is to overhaul the bowels of the entire European financial system. Unless you work in finance, it’s unlikely you’ll come across it. But it will have a knock-on effect on the entire credit system and, therefore, on every aspect of European economic life. Here’s the really jaw-dropping fact, though: Mifid 2 is costing billions to implement and will shape markets for decades to come, and yet almost the whole thing could be scrapped without any adverse effects whatsoever. But what would you expect of bureaucrats bent on homogenisation across 28/27 countries/cultures?
The USA
- This isn't a view I expected to hear: The #Metoo movement is a puritan backlash which treats women as children and denies their sexual freedom. Men’s careers were being ruined when their only wrong was touching a knee, stealing a kiss, talking of intimate matters at a professional dinner. Far from helping women to become independent, this, in reality, serves the interests of the enemies of sexual freedom - religious extremists, the worst reactionaries and those who believe in the name of Victorian morality that women are children with the faces of adults. This comes from a group of 'eminent' French women and my guess is it'd find considerable support among Spanish women. But I could be very wrong of course, especially as gender violence is as much a media obsession here as pedophilia is in the UK.
The World
- Do you think you know what 'neoliberalism' means? Well, given how the term has transmuted several times over the decades since it first appeared, maybe you do and maybe you don't. (BTW: The same happened with the core word 'liberalism' which preceded it. Having been invented here in Spain, in fact). The article at the end of this post addresses the concept and highlights its deficiencies, without throwing the baby out with the bathwater. An essential read, if you want to know what's going on around the globe. You can see it on The Guardian's site here, if you prefer.
Pontevedra
- I gave an English lesson to the young son of my neighbour last night - after he'd failed an exam last week. I was left wondering how on earth he'd been taught about el genetivo saxon/sajón and possessive pronouns, as he clearly had no idea about the rules. And his only text book majored on exercises, not guidance.
- Another surprise was the text on the biro he left behind. This had been issued by the Galician Xunta and bore the legend: Visita Sex Invaders no Facebook. Which is Gallego for Visita Sex Invaders en Facebook. But you probably guessed that. This appears to be a Galician site dedicated to ensuring safe sex. Click here if you want to know more.
Finally
- A bit of pop trivia.
Today's Cartoon
Talking of noise . . . .
THE ARTICLE
The
fatal flaw of neoliberalism: it's bad economics: Dani Rodrik
As
even its harshest critics concede, neoliberalism is hard to pin down.
In broad terms, it denotes a preference for markets over government,
economic incentives over cultural norms, and private entrepreneurship
over collective action. It has been used to describe a wide range of
phenomena – from Augusto Pinochet to Margaret Thatcher and Ronald
Reagan, from the Clinton Democrats and the UK’s New Labour to the
economic opening in China and the reform of the welfare state in
Sweden.
The
term is used as a catchall for anything that smacks of deregulation,
liberalisation, privatisation or fiscal austerity. Today it is
routinely reviled as a shorthand for the ideas and practices that
have produced growing economic insecurity and inequality, led to the
loss of our political values and ideals, and even precipitated our
current populist backlash.
We
live in the age of neoliberalism, apparently. But who are
neoliberalism’s adherents and disseminators – the neoliberals
themselves? Oddly, you have to go back a long time to find anyone
explicitly embracing neoliberalism. In 1982, Charles Peters, the
longtime editor of the political magazine Washington Monthly,
published an essay titled A Neo-Liberal’s
Manifesto. It
makes for interesting reading 35 years later, since the neoliberalism
it describes bears little resemblance to today’s target of
derision. The politicians Peters names as exemplifying the movement
are not the likes of Thatcher and Reagan, but rather liberals – in
the US sense of the word – who have become disillusioned with
unions and big government and dropped their prejudices against
markets and the military.
The
use of the term “neoliberal” exploded in the 1990s, when it
became closely associated with two developments, neither of which
Peters’s article had mentioned. One of these was financial
deregulation, which would culminate in the 2008 financial
crash and
in the still-lingering .euro debacle
The second was economic globalisation, which accelerated thanks to
free flows of finance and to a new, more ambitious type of trade
agreement. Financialisation and globalisation have become the most
overt manifestations of neoliberalism in today’s world.
That
neoliberalism is a slippery, shifting concept, with no explicit lobby
of defenders, does not mean that it is irrelevant or unreal. Who can
deny that the world has experienced a decisive shift toward markets
from the 1980s on? Or that centre-left politicians – Democrats in
the US, socialists and social democrats in Europe –
enthusiastically adopted some of the central creeds of Thatcherism
and Reaganism, such as deregulation, privatisation, financial
liberalisation and individual enterprise? Much of our contemporary
policy discussion remains infused with principles supposedly grounded
in the concept of homo economicus,
the perfectly rational human being, found in many economic theories,
who always pursues his own self-interest.
But
the looseness of the term neoliberalism also means that criticism of
it often misses the mark. There is nothing wrong with markets,
private entrepreneurship or incentives – when deployed
appropriately. Their creative use lies behind the most significant
economic achievements of our time. As we heap scorn on neoliberalism,
we risk throwing out some of neoliberalism’s useful ideas.
The
real trouble is that mainstream economics shades too easily into
ideology, constraining the choices that we appear to have and
providing cookie-cutter solutions. A proper understanding of the
economics that lie behind neoliberalism would allow us to identify –
and to reject – ideology when it masquerades as economic science.
Most importantly, it would help us to develop the institutional
imagination we badly need to redesign capitalism for the 21st
century.
Neoliberalism
is typically understood as being based on key tenets of mainstream
economic science. To see those tenets without the ideology, consider
this thought experiment. A well-known and highly regarded economist
lands in a country he has never visited and knows nothing about. He
is brought to a meeting with the country’s leading policymakers.
“Our country is in trouble,” they tell him. “The economy is
stagnant, investment is low, and there is no growth in sight.” They
turn to him expectantly: “Please tell us what we should do to make
our economy grow.”
The
economist pleads ignorance and explains that he knows too little
about the country to make any recommendations. He would need to study
the history of the economy, to analyse the statistics, and to travel
around the country before he could say anything.
But
his hosts are insistent. “We understand your reticence, and we wish
you had the time for all that,” they tell him. “But isn’t
economics a science, and aren’t you one of its most distinguished
practitioners? Even though you do not know much about our economy,
surely there are some general theories and prescriptions you can
share with us to guide our economic policies and reforms.”
The
economist is now in a bind. He does not want to emulate those
economic gurus he has long criticised for peddling their favourite
policy advice. But he feels challenged by the question. Are there
universal truths in economics? Can he say anything valid or useful?
So
he begins. The efficiency with which an economy’s resources are
allocated is a critical determinant of the economy’s performance,
he says. Efficiency, in turn, requires aligning the incentives of
households and businesses with social costs and benefits. The
incentives faced by entrepreneurs, investors and producers are
particularly important when it comes to economic growth. Growth needs
a system of property rights and contract enforcement that will ensure
those who invest can retain the returns on their investments. And the
economy must be open to ideas and innovations from the rest of the
world.
But
economies can be derailed by macroeconomic instability, he goes on.
Governments must therefore pursue a sound monetary
policy,
which means restricting the growth of liquidity to the increase in
nominal money demand at reasonable inflation. They must ensure fiscal
sustainability, so that the increase in public debt does not outpace
national income. And they must carry out prudential regulation of
banks and other financial institutions to prevent the financial
system from taking excessive risk.
Now
he is warming to his task. Economics is not just about efficiency and
growth, he adds. Economic principles also carry over to equity and
social policy. Economics
has
little to say about how much redistribution a society should seek.
But it does tell us that the tax base should be as broad as possible,
and that social programmes should be designed in a way that does not
encourage workers to drop out of the labour market.
By
the time the economist stops, it appears as if he has laid out a
fully fledged neoliberal agenda. A critic in the audience will have
heard all the code words: efficiency, incentives, property rights,
sound money, fiscal prudence. And yet the universal principles that
the economist describes are in fact quite open-ended. They presume a
capitalist economy – one in which investment decisions are made by
private individuals and firms – but not much beyond that. They
allow for – indeed, they require – a surprising variety of
institutional arrangements.
So
has the economist just delivered a neoliberal screed? We would be
mistaken to think so, and our mistake would consist of associating
each abstract term – incentives, property rights, sound money –
with a particular institutional counterpart. And therein lies the
central conceit, and the fatal flaw, of neoliberalism: the belief
that first-order economic principles map on to a unique set of
policies, approximated by a Thatcher/Reagan-style agenda.
Consider
property rights. They matter insofar as they allocate returns on
investments. An optimal system would distribute property rights to
those who would make the best use of an asset, and afford protection
against those most likely to expropriate the returns. Property rights
are good when they protect innovators from free riders, but they are
bad when they protect them from competition. Depending on the
context, a legal regime that provides the appropriate incentives can
look quite different from the standard US-style regime of private
property rights.
This
may seem like a semantic point with little practical import; but
China’s phenomenal economic success is largely due to its
orthodoxy-defying institutional tinkering. China turned to markets,
but did not copy western practices in property rights. Its reforms
produced market-based incentives through a series of unusual
institutional arrangements that were better adapted to the local
context. Rather than move directly from state to private ownership,
for example, which would have been stymied by the weakness of the
prevailing legal structures, the country relied on mixed forms of
ownership that provided more effective property rights for
entrepreneurs in practice. Township and Village Enterprises (TVEs),
which spearheaded Chinese economic growth during the 1980s, were
collectives owned and controlled by local governments. Even though
TVEs were publicly owned, entrepreneurs received the protection they
needed against expropriation. Local governments had a direct stake in
the profits of the firms, and hence did not want to kill the goose
that lays the golden eggs.
China
relied on a range of such innovations, each delivering the
economist’s higher-order economic principles in unfamiliar
institutional arrangements. For instance, it shielded its large state
sector from global competition, establishing special economic zones
where foreign firms could operate with different rules than in the
rest of the economy. In view of such departures from orthodox
blueprints, describing China’s economic reforms as neoliberal –
as critics are inclined to do – distorts more than it reveals. If
we are to call this neoliberalism, we must surely look more kindly on
the ideas behind the most dramatic poverty
reduction in
history.
One
might protest that China’s institutional innovations were purely
transitional. Perhaps it will have to converge on western-style
institutions to sustain its economic progress. But this common line
of thinking overlooks the diversity of capitalist arrangements that
still prevails among advanced economies, despite the considerable
homogenisation of our policy discourse.
What,
after all, are western institutions? The size of the public sector in
OECD countries varies, from a third of the economy in Korea to nearly
60% in Finland. In Iceland, 86% of workers are members of a trade
union; the comparable number in Switzerland is just 16%. In the US,
firms can fire workers almost at will; French
labour laws have
historically required employers to jump through many hoops first.
Stock markets have grown to a total value of nearly one-and-a-half
times GDP in the US; in Germany, they are only a third as large,
equivalent to just 50% of GDP.
The
idea that any one of these models of taxation, labour relations or
financial organisation is inherently superior to the others is belied
by the varying economic fortunes that each of these economies have
experienced over recent decades. The US has gone through successive
periods of angst in which its economic institutions were judged
inferior to those in Germany, Japan, China, and now possibly Germany
again. Certainly, comparable levels of wealth and productivity can be
produced under very different models of capitalism. We might even go
a step further: today’s prevailing models probably come nowhere
near exhausting the range of what might be possible, and desirable,
in the future.
The
visiting economist in our thought experiment knows all this, and
recognises that the principles he has enunciated need to be filled in
with institutional detail before they become operational. Property
rights? Yes, but how? Sound money? Of course, but how? It would
perhaps be easier to criticise his list of principles for being
vacuous than to denounce it as a neoliberal screed.
Still,
these principles are not entirely content-free. China, and indeed all
countries that managed to develop rapidly, demonstrate the utility of
those principles once they are properly adapted to local context.
Conversely, too many economies have been driven to ruin courtesy of
political leaders who chose to violate them. We need look no further
than Latin American populists or
eastern European communist regimes to appreciate the practical
significance of sound money, fiscal sustainability and private
incentives.
Of
course, economics goes beyond a list of abstract, largely
common-sense principles. Much of the work of economists consists of
developing stylised models of
how economies work and then confronting those models with evidence.
Economists tend to think of what they do as progressively refining
their understanding of the world: their models are supposed to get
better and better as they are tested and revised over time. But
progress in economics happens differently.
Economists
study a social reality that is unlike the physical universe. It is
completely manmade, highly malleable and operates according to
different rules across time and
space. Economics advances not by settling on the right model or
theory to answer such questions, but by improving our understanding
of the diversity of causal relationships. Neoliberalism and its
customary remedies – always more markets, always less government –
are in fact a perversion of mainstream economics. Good economists
know that the correct answer to any question in economics is: it
depends.
Does
an increase in the minimum wage depress employment? Yes, if the
labour market is really competitive and employers have no control
over the wage they must pay to attract workers; but not necessarily
otherwise. Does trade liberalisation increase economic growth? Yes,
if it increases the profitability of industries where the bulk of
investment and innovation takes place; but not otherwise. Does more
government spending increase employment? Yes, if there is slack in
the economy and wages do not rise; but not otherwise. Does monopoly
harm innovation? Yes and no, depending on a whole host of market
circumstances.
In
economics, new models rarely supplant older models. The basic
competitive-markets model dating back to Adam Smith has been modified
over time by the inclusion, in rough historical order, of monopoly,
externalities, scale economies, incomplete and asymmetric
information, irrational behaviour and many other real-world features.
But the older models remain as useful as ever. Understanding how real
markets operate necessitates using different lenses at different
times.
Perhaps
maps offer the best analogy. Just like economic models, maps
are highly stylised representations of
reality.
They are useful precisely because they abstract from many real-world
details that would get in the way. But abstraction also implies that
we need a different map depending on the nature of our journey. If we
are travelling by bike, we need a map of bike trails. If we are to go
on foot, we need a map of footpaths. If a new subway is constructed,
we will need a subway map – but we wouldn’t throw out the older
maps.
Economists
tend to be very good at making maps, but not good enough at choosing
the one most suited to the task at hand. When confronted with policy
questions of the type our visiting economist faces, too many of them
resort to “benchmark” models that favour
the laissez-faire approach.
Kneejerk solutions and hubris replace the richness and humility of
the discussion in the seminar room. John Maynard Keynes once defined
economics as the “science of thinking in terms of models, joined to
the art of choosing models which are relevant”. Economists
typically have trouble with the “art” part.
This,
too, can be illustrated with a parable. A journalist calls an
economics professor for his view on whether free trade is a good
idea. The professor responds enthusiastically in the affirmative. The
journalist then goes undercover as a student in the professor’s
advanced graduate seminar on international trade. He poses the same
question: is free trade good? This time the professor is stymied.
“What do you mean by ‘good’?” he responds. “And good for
whom?” The professor then launches into an extensive exegesis that
will ultimately culminate in a heavily hedged statement: “So if the
long list of conditions I have just described are satisfied, and
assuming we can tax the beneficiaries to compensate the losers, freer
trade has the potential to increase everyone’s wellbeing.” If he
is in an expansive mood, the professor might add that the effect of
free trade on an economy’s longterm growth rate is not clear
either, and would depend on an altogether different set of
requirements.
This
professor is rather different from the one the journalist encountered
previously. On the record, he exudes self-confidence, not reticence,
about the appropriate policy. There is one and only one model, at
least as far as the public conversation is concerned, and there is a
single correct answer, regardless of context. Strangely, the
professor deems the knowledge that he imparts to his advanced
students to be inappropriate (or dangerous) for the general public.
Why?
The
roots of such behaviour lie deep in the culture of the economics
profession. But one important motive is the zeal to display the
profession’s crown jewels – market efficiency, the invisible
hand, comparative advantage – in untarnished form, and to shield
them from attack by self-interested barbarians, namely the
protectionists.
Unfortunately, these economists typically ignore the barbarians on
the other side of the issue – financiers and multinational
corporations whose motives are no purer and who are all too ready to
hijack these ideas for their own benefit.
As
a result, economists’ contributions to public debate are often
biased in one direction, in favour of more trade, more finance and
less government. That is why economists have developed a reputation
as cheerleaders for neoliberalism, even if mainstream economics is
very far from a paean to laissez-faire. The economists who let their
enthusiasm for free markets run wild are in fact not being true to
their own discipline.
How
then should we think about globalisation in order to liberate it from
the grip of neoliberal practices? We must begin by understanding the
positive potential of global markets. Access to world markets in
goods, technologies and capital has played an important role in
virtually all of the economic miracles of our time. China is the most
recent and powerful reminder of this historical truth, but it is not
the only case. Before China, similar miracles were performed by South
Korea, Taiwan, Japan and a few non-Asian countries such as Mauritius.
All of these countries embraced globalisation rather than turn their
backs on it, and they benefited handsomely.
Defenders
of the existing economic order will quickly point to these examples
when globalisation comes into question. What they will fail to say is
that almost all of these countries joined the world economy by
violating neoliberal strictures. South Korea and Taiwan, for
instance, heavily subsidised their exporters, the former through the
financial system and the latter through tax incentives. All of them
eventually removed most of their import restrictions, long after
economic growth had taken off.
But
none, with the sole exception of Chile in the 1980s under Pinochet,
followed the neoliberal recommendation of a rapid opening-up to
imports. Chile’s neoliberal
experiment eventually
produced the worst economic crisis in all of Latin America. While the
details differ across countries, in all cases governments played an
active role in restructuring the economy and buffering it against a
volatile external environment. Industrial policies, restrictions on
capital flows and currency controls – all prohibited in the
neoliberal playbook – were rampant.
By
contrast, countries that stuck closest to the neoliberal model of
globalisation were sorely disappointed. Mexico provides a
particularly sad example. Following a series of macroeconomic crises
in the mid-1990s, Mexico embraced macroeconomic orthodoxy,
extensively liberalised its economy, freed up the financial system,
sharply reduced import restrictions and signed the North American
Free Trade Agreement (Nafta). These policies did produce
macroeconomic stability and a significant rise in foreign trade and
internal investment. But where it counts – in overall productivity
and economic growth – the experiment
failed.
Since undertaking the reforms, overall productivity in Mexico has
stagnated, and the economy has underperformed even by the undemanding
standards of Latin America.
These
outcomes are not a surprise from the perspective of sound economics.
They are yet another manifestation of the need for economic policies
to be attuned to the failures to which markets are prone, and to be
tailored to the specific circumstances of each country. No single
blueprint fits all.
As
Peters’s 1982 manifesto attests, the meaning of neoliberalism has
changed considerably over time as the label has acquired harder-line
connotations with respect to deregulation, financialisation and
globalisation. But there is one thread that connects all versions of
neoliberalism, and that is the emphasis on
economic growth.
Peters wrote in 1982 that the emphasis was warranted because growth
is essential to all our social and political ends – community,
democracy, prosperity. Entrepreneurship, private investment and
removing obstacles that stand in the way (such as excessive
regulation) were all instruments for achieving economic growth. If a
similar neoliberal manifesto were penned today, it would no doubt
make the same point.
Critics
often point out that this emphasis on economics debases and
sacrifices other important values such as equality, social inclusion,
democratic deliberation and justice. Those political and social
objectives obviously matter enormously, and in some contexts they
matter the most. They cannot always, or even often, be achieved by
means of technocratic economic policies; politics must play a central
role.
Still,
neoliberals are not wrong when they argue that our most cherished
ideals are more likely to be attained when our economy is vibrant,
strong and growing. Where they are wrong is in believing that there
is a unique and universal recipe for improving economic performance,
to which they have access. The fatal flaw of neoliberalism is that it
does not even get the economics right. It must be rejected on its own
terms for the simple reason that it is bad economics.
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