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The pandemic public-debt dilemma
By Michael Spence and Danny Leipziger
MILAN Increased government spending during the pandemic is essential for managing public health, supporting households that have lost income and preserving businesses that otherwise may fail and thus cause longer-term damage to output and employment. Kristalina Georgieva, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, has urged policymakers to “spend but keep the receipts”. Likewise, World Bank Chief Economist Carmen M. Reinhart reminds us that, “first you worry about fighting the war, then you figure out how to pay for it”.
Although these are sound recommendations for countries with solid fiscal foundations, the long-term risks of increased spending may be dangerously high for others. In 2008, the Commission on Growth and Development, on which we both served, showed that successful developing countries owe their economic growth in part to the quality of their social and capital spending. A