Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Why Internal Devaluation is Not Leading to Export-Led Growth in Greece | Brookings Institution

 While all labor cost and competitiveness indexes somehow reflect the fall of employee compensation in Greece, reflecting the success of the Troika policy to internally devalue incomes, the revival of export-led growth anticipated by the Troika has, so far, failed to materialize.
We only need to look at wages in each sector to see that the competitive parts of the economy never suffered from excessive wages in the first place: Reducing private sector wages did little to make the Greek economy more competitive because this was never the real problem.[1] Rather, the main reason why private economy competitiveness was held back centered on rent-seeking regulation that preserved oligopolistic structures in product markets, stifled competition-creating rents, and increased the cost of introducing innovations in production and supply lines, all of which would allow productive ecosystems[2] to evolve and research based innovation to increase.[3]
Why Internal Devaluation is Not Leading to Export-Led Growth in Greece | Brookings Institution

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