The Economist - UK (2021-11-20)

(Antfer) #1

24 Briefing Government spending TheEconomistNovember20th 2021


hear  that,  from  1948  to  1984,  the  British
state ran its own chain of hotels, that is be­
cause the “neoliberal” outlook on the prop­
er place of government has triumphed. 
Yet in other areas today’s governments
have  more  power  than  ever.  Building
things  requires  developers  to  jump
through  more  environmental,  conserva­
tion  and  local­opposition  hoops  than  it
used  to.  Health­and­safety  laws  have  pro­
liferated.  Occupational  licensing  has
grown  dramatically  across  Europe  and
North America. 
For decades unions in many rich coun­
tries  successfully  argued  against  govern­
ment­imposed  minimum  wages,  saying
they  would  do  a  better  job  of  raising  pay
themselves. But as they have withered, the
government  has  stepped  in  to  provide
wage  floors.  Rules  relating  to  other  work­
place  matters  such  as  parental  leave  and
gender­pay gaps go in only one direction. 
And if direct government control of the
economy has weakened, it has been more
than replaced by redistribution. The objec­
tive  correlative  of  Mr  Clinton’s  claim  that
the  era  of  big  government  was  over  took
the form of tax credits; he tripled those for
low earners with children, and introduced
the universal credit for children that Mr Bi­
den now wishes to expand. In 1979 the bot­
tom  fifth  of  American  earners  received
means­tested  transfers  worth  on  average
32%  of  their  pre­tax  income,  according  to
the  Congressional  Budget  Office.  By  2018
the figure was 68%.Total social­protection
spending  in  the  oecd—comprising  cash
benefits, direct in­kind provision of goods
and  services,  and  “tax  breaks  with  social
purposes”—grew  from  15%  of  gdpin  1980
to 20% in 2019.
Three  forces  stand  out  as  driving  the
trend:  the  incentives  which  bureaucrats
and politicians face; the rising costs of ser­
vices provided by the government; and the
demands of voters. 
Governments  and  bureaucrats  are  at
least partly self­interested: “public­choice
theory”  says  that  unrestrained  bureaucra­
cies  will  defend  their  turf  and  seek  to  ex­
pand  it.  A  good  recent  example  would  be
central  banks.  Their  mandates  typically
compel  them  to  control  inflation  and  see
off  bank  runs.  Yet  in  recent  years,  with  a
cursory  and  often  unconvincing  nod  to
those mandates, central bankers have tak­
en  on  fresh  responsibilities.  America’s
Federal  Reserve  seems  to  believe  it  has
both the obligation and the tools to reduce
racial inequality, while many central bank­
ers want to raise the relative cost of capital
for fossil­fuel companiesvia interventions
in the corporate­bond market.
Politicians have their own incentives to
expand  the  state.  It  is  generally  more  re­
warding for a politician to introduce a new
programme  than  it  is  to  close  an  old  one
down; costs are spread across all taxpayers

while benefits tend to be concentrated,
thus eliciting gratitude from interest
groupsandsometimesevenvoters.
Technology,inparticularcommunica­
tionstechnology,hasservedtostrengthen
the bureaucracy’sgrasp.Itis nocoinci­
dencethatbiggergovernmentsemergedat
roughlythesamepointinthe20thcentury
aslargecorporations,whichalsorequired
a new communications infrastructure.
Morerapideconomicgrowthpoweredby
thosenewarrangementsmadethegrowth
ofgovernment lessburdensome than it
mighthavebeen.

Hardlycromulent
Thesecondbroadfactorbehindthegrow­
ingpowerofthestateiswhatWilliamBau­
mol,aneconomist,named“costdisease”.
Inthe1960sBaumolnotedthatproductivi­
tyinsomesectorsisgreaterthaninothers.
Butwagesmustriseinlessproductivesec­
torsastheyriseinmoreproductivesectors
topreventworkersquitting.Sodespitethe
factthatanorchestraattheRoyalAlbert
Hallcontainsaboutthesamenumberof
musiciansasit didwhenthevenueopened
in1871,eachmusicianispaida lotmoreto­
day,giventhevastlygreateropportunities

thatareonofferintheeconomy.
Alotofgovernmentspendingisinar­
easwherelabour­productivity growthis
slow,mostnotablytheprovisionofeduca­
tionandhealthcare(seechart3 onnext
page).Astherealwagesofdoctors,nurses
andteachersgoupataratesetbyother
partsoftheeconomy,sodoesspending.
Whatismore,educationandhealthcare
arealsowhateconomistscall“superior”
goods.Aspeoplebecomerichertheyspend
a higherfractionoftheirincomeonthem.
Ifitisthegovernmentthatprovidesthose
services,itmustspendmore.Acrossthe
oecd overall health spending has risen
from8%ofgdpin 2005 to10%,andgovern­
mentsareresponsibleforthebulkofthat.
OthershaveextendedBaumol’sideas,
arguingthatgovernmentinterventionin­
hibitsproductivitygrowth.A recentreport
by Steven Teles, Samuel Hammond and
DanielTakashoftheNiskanenCentre,a
think­tankinWashington,dc, warnsofa
viciouscycleinwhichsubsidiesforservic­
esthesupplyofwhichisconstrainedby
regulations,suchashousingandeduca­
tion,pushupprices,creatingdemandsfor
furthersubsidies.Oneexampleisstudent
loans:inAmerica60%ofanyincreasein
themaximumsubsidisedloanispassed
throughintohighertuitionfees,according
toa studybytheFederalReserveBankof
New York. American politics is replete
with promises of further subsidies for
highereducation.Pledgestoreducecosts
arethinontheground.
Thefinalsteroidisthevoters’appetite,
whichdependsonwhothevotersare.Over
thecourseofthe20thcenturyincreasing
numberswereworkingclassandincreas­
ingnumberswerewomen.Politicalscien­
tistshavelinkedtheexpansionofwomen’s
suffrageacrosstherichworldtogrowthin
socialspending,especiallyonhealthand
education.
Twentieth­century voters were also
increasingly likelyto have fought in or

Spotthetrend
Governmentspending ,%ofGDP

Sources:VitoTanziandLudgerSchuknecht;IMF;OECD;AMECO *Forecast †1870-1937centralgovernment,1960- 0   1general government

2

60
40
20
0
1870 2021*

Austria

1870 2021*

Britain

1870 2021*

France

1870 2021*

Germany
60
40
20
0
1870 2021*

Italy

60
40
20
0
1870 2021*

Japan

1870 2021*

Spain†

1870 2021*

Sweden

1870 2021*

Switzerland
60
40
20
0
1870 2021*

United States

An era unended
United States, federal spending by source
% of GDP

1

Sources:Congressional Budget Oce;
Oceof Management and Budget

Netinterest

Net mandatory

Discretionary
30

20

10

0

40

201020009080701962
Free download pdf