1. The Council of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development met at Ministerial level on 14th-15th June, 1978, under the co-Chairmanship of Mr. Kiichi Miyazawa, Minister of Economic Planning of Japan, and Mr. Nobuhiko Ushiba, Minister for External Economic Affairs of Japan.
2. Agreement was reached on the major components of a broad
programme of internationally concerted action by Member
countries to achieve more sustained economic growth, and on
the respective responsibilities of individual Member
countries in contributing to faster growth, greater price
stability, better payments equilibrium and strengthened
energy policies. Recognising that the maintenance of an open
market-oriented economic system is an essential part of this
programme, Ministers renewed the Declaration of 30th May,
1974 (the
3. Ministers considered the implications of the growing
economic interdependence between developed and developing
countries for trade and investment. They confirmed their
commitment to constructive policies for development co-
operation to help developing countries to strengthen and
diversify their economies and to improve the welfare of
their people. They emphasized that the capacity of
developing countries to participate more fully in world
economic growth would be strengthened by an increase in the
flow of resources, including increased aid, and an
improvement in the conditions of world trade.
I. The Economic Background
4. Ministers noted that despite the difficult circumstances
there has been some improvement in world economic
conditions: recession has been replaced by positive economic
growth; inflation has been significantly reduced;
unemployment has been substantially reduced in the United
States and has been mitigated in a number of Member
countries, inter alia by special manpower and employment
policies; an open trading system has been maintained; some
important payments imbalances have been corrected; and
international financial markets have helped to alleviate the
problems posed by large trade imbalances inside and outside
the OECD. Nonetheless, the record of recent years is in many
ways disappointing: unsatisfactory growth rates; inflation
and unemployment rates that are still too high; periods of
disorderly exchange-market conditions; increasing pressures
for forms of government intervention which inhibit market
forces in general and world trade in particular; and
insufficient preparation against future needs in respect of
energy. While these developments are harmful to the welfare
of all countries, the adverse consequences for the
development prospects of the poorer countries are of
particular concern.
5. Ministers recognised the costs and dangers inherent in
the continuation of present trends:
6. Ministers discussed the constraints on economic growth.
Many of these are internal to the countries in question:
high rates of inflation, low profits, heavy dependence on
exports and difficulties in financing large budget deficits
without adverse effects on inflationary expectations and
concern about the rapid increase in governments'
indebtedness. There is also an external constraint on
countries with a weak balance of payments. Together, the
persistence of high rates of inflation, low levels of
profits and capacity utilisation, large international
payments disequilibria and periods of disorderly exchange-
market conditions have depressed business confidence. A
further significant factor has been uncertainties about the
future supply and price of energy, resulting in part from
delays in the implementation of effective energy policies.
Under these conditions, private investment has not responded
as expected to the action taken to stimulate aggregate
demand.
7. While recognising these constraints, Ministers reaffirmed
the decision they took in 1976 to aim for a moderate but
sustained rate of expansion, sufficient to achieve a
progressive return to full employment over a number of
years, but not so fast as to risk the re-emergence of
bottlenecks and an upsurge of inflationary expectations. In
line with this strategy, Ministers agreed that there is a
clear need to step up economic growth in the OECD area as a
whole above the rate experienced over the last 18 months so
as to reduce unemployment. While expansionary demand
management policies have a role to play, this cannot be
achieved simply by injections of additional purchasing
power. The difficulties now facing the world economy are
inseparable and cannot be looked at in isolation: growth,
jobs, price stability, energy, adjustment to structural
change, are only individual facets of the overall
predicament facing Member countries today. What is needed
now, and over the medium-term, is a combination of policies
to ensure adequate domestic demand and to create the right
environment for sustainable growth, which requires less
inflation, the maintenance of an open market-oriented
economic system, and a recovery in productive investment and
profits.
8. A key feature of the programme of concerted action set
out below is that differentiated action on various fronts by
each Member country can, taken together, ease the
constraints facing each of them individually:
9. Ministers underlined the fact that successful
implementation of this programme depends not only on
government policy, but also on the extent to which all
concerned pursue responsible attitudes towards the
determination of prices and incomes. They stressed their
conviction that, with the necessary co-operation from both
sides of industry, more sustained and better balanced
economic growth can be secured with a further progressive
reduction of inflation.
II. A Programme of Concerted Action
10. Against this background, Ministers have agreed on the
following major components of a programme of concerted
action.
Demand Management and Stabilization
11. Ministers agreed on the respective responsibilities of
individual Member countries in contributing to faster
growth, greater price stability and better payments
equilibrium over the next 18 months:
ii) All other Member countries, who are not currently
in a position to take explicit action to expand
domestic demand beyond what is now in prospect, should
concentrate primarily on reducing inflation and improving
their balance-of- payments position. Most countries in
this group can accept the faster growth which
concerted action will impart through a stronger rise in
their exports. But in a few of them, where activity
has been increasing briskly and demand pressures are
quite strong, increased exports resulting from concerted
action should be accompanied by reinforced
stabilization policies which prevent any net addition to
total demand. It is particularly important that the recent
acceleration of inflation in the United States
should be reversed.
Maintenance of an Open Market-Oriented Economic System
12. Ministers agreed that firm commitments to maintain an
open market-oriented economic system are essential to the
success of this programme. To this end, Ministers:
ii) Reaffirmed their determination to bring the
Multilateral Trade Negotiations to a successful
outcome in the near future.
iii) Expressed satisfaction that the negotiations for
an Arrangement on guidelines for officially
supported export credits had been successfully concluded in
February. The United States and Canada requested
other Participants in it to enter into negotiations
for the substantive improvement of the existing
Arrangement. Other Participants were not in a position to
react definitively to this request on this
occasion. However, in recalling that the Arrangement had
only come into force in April, they noted the provision in
it for reviews at regular intervals, starting this
autumn, of its operation in practice and that these
reviews would provide the opportunity to consider any
further suggestions for reinforcing administration
of the guidelines.
iv) Agreed on the general orientations for policies
to facilitate the structural adjustments needed to
sustain faster economic growth annexed to this
Communique (Annex 11).
Energy
13. Ministers took note of the decision as adopted by the
Governing Board of the International Energy Agency at
Ministerial level on 6th October, 1977. They stressed that
strengthened energy policies form an essential part of the
concerted action programme. While recognising that
considerable progress has been made. Ministers underlined
the following orientations for energy policies and agreed
that they need to be pursued vigorously:
ii) More should be done to achieve greater energy
conservation, to replace oil by other forms of
energy (particularly by expanding coal use, assuring
adequate nuclear programmes as appropriate and
developing stable and reliable conditions for
trade in coal and nuclear fuels and technologies) and to
encourage expanded oil and gas exploration and development
and intensified research and development for new
energy technologies. A key requirement is the need to
resolve as soon as possible conflicts which may exist
between energy requirements and important
environmental, regional, safety and security
concerns.
14. Given its predominant weight as both a consumer and
producer of energy and the cost of oil imports to its
balance of payments, it is of decisive importance that the
United States should complete the adoption of a
comprehensive energy policy along these lines as soon as
possible. At the same time, other Member countries have, in
the aggregate, an equally important contribution to make,
and Ministers agreed that in these countries energy policies
need to be strengthened further.
Monetary Co-operation
15. Implementation of policies along the lines described
above, particularly if adopted in the framework of a
concerted programme, will not only improve the prospects for
economic growth, but will also help to reduce existing
payments imbalances and thereby contribute to greater
stability in foreign exchange markets. Ministers agreed that
monetary policy has an important role to play in the
achievement of these objectives. While recognising that
exchange rates need to reflect underlying economic
conditions, Ministers agreed that their countries will
continue to co-operate closely and to intervene in exchange
markets to counter disorderly conditions. Greater stability
in foreign exchange markets will, in turn, improve
confidence and help to achieve sustained economic growth.
16. Ministers agreed that the prompt implementation of the
various components of this programme of concerted action
should be followed up in the appropriate bodies of the
Organisation.
17. Ministers noted the work undertaken with respect to
paragraph 17 of the Communique issued after their last
meeting concerning the particular problems of the less-
industrialised Member countries, and agreed that the outcome
of this work should be reported to the next meeting of the
Council at Ministerial level.
III. Global interdependence and relations with developing
countries
18. Ministers reviewed relations with developing countries
in the perspective of development co-operation and the
management of global interdependence. Recognising that the
prosperity of the OECD countries cannot be pursued in
isolation, they emphasized the importance of strengthened
co-operation with the developing countries to advance common
interests in efficient global economic management and
mutually beneficial changes in the structure and balance of
the world economy. They also stressed the need for positive
policies for increased and more effective support of
accelerated economic and social development of the
developing countries. They noted with satisfaction the
recent establishment of the United Nations General Assembly
Committee of the Whole as a new form of dialogue on global
economic issues with the developing countries. They
expressed the hope that its work would be developed
constructively and affirmed the determination of their
governments to work to this end.
Interdependence, Trade and Adjustment
19. Ministers discussed recent changes in the pattern of
world production and trade, with particular reference to the
industrial advances made by some developing countries.
While, especially under conditions of slower growth, these
advances have been a factor in adjustment problems in a
limited number of industrial sectors, Ministers agreed that
trade with developing countries has brought positive
benefits to both parties, and that there is a mutual
interest in continued expansion of such trade. Ministers
reiterated their commitment to an open multilateral trading
system on a world-wide basis and re-affirmed their readiness
to adjust to changes in the pattern of world production and
trade. Renewal of the Trade Pledge, a successful outcome to
the Multilateral Trade Negotiations and endorsement of the
need for more positive adjustment policies will contribute
to this end.
20. At the same time Ministers noted the advantages which
would follow to the world economy in general, including to
other developing countries, if developing countries with
stronger economies would progressively adapt their trade and
other policies in line with their level of development and
overall financial strength.
Interdependence and International Public and Private
Investment
21. Ministers noted that increased investment in developing
countries would contribute to sustained and more balanced
world economic growth as well as enhancing development in
the countries concerned. Both developed and developing
countries therefore should have a mutual interest in
measures to stimulate investment in developing countries on
an economic basis. Among the sectors mentioned were energy,
food production, raw materials and processing and related
infrastructure. In this connection, Ministers noted the
importance of current and prospective negotiations to expand
the lending capacity of the international and regional
development finance institutions. They agreed to examine
within the Organisation
the utility and feasibility of other measures designed to
increase investment flows to developing countries, building
on existing institutions and mechanisms. Such measures
clearly need to be compatible with the development
objectives of the countries concerned and would naturally
have to be worked out in close co-operation with the
developing countries. These measures, which should also be
of a kind to stimulate investment in least developed
countries should be explored in the framework of positive
development cooperation including increased aid.
Energy Co-operation
22. Ministers also emphasized that the energy problems of
the future would affect all countries and would need to be
tackled by all countries working in co-operation. They
reaffirmed their willingness to engage in such co-operation,
especially with the developing countries.
Development Co-operation
23. Ministers agreed on the need for an evolving approach to
development co-operation to help developing countries in
their efforts to strengthen and diversify their economies,
to secure decent conditions of life for their people, and to
participate increasingly as more equal partners within the
world economy. In particular, stepped-up collaborative
efforts are required to help ensure that the basic needs of
the world's poor are met and to encourage constructive
structural change in international economic relations,
leading to a more equitable and stable international
economic system. Ministers noted the disappointing overall
recent level of aid flows. However, they welcomed the
performance of some donors and the statements by a number of
other donors on plans for expanding their aid allocations
and taking other measures to make their official assistance
more effective. Ministers of OECD countries, donors of aid,
reaffirmed the intention as expressed by their countries in
different fora to increase effectively and substantially
their official development assistance and to achieve an
improved balance of their efforts in this regard. They agreed
to examine further how best to ensure that larger aid
allocations are effectively spent.
IV. Other matters
Illicit payments
24. Ministers expressed their satisfaction with the
substantial progress made this year by the special working
party of the United Nations Economic and Social Council in
the preparation of a treaty to prevent illicit payments in
connection with international commercial transactions. They
expressed the wish that subsequent progress would permit
that a conference of plenipotentiaries could be convened at
the earliest possible date.
POLICIES FOR ADJUSTMENT: SOME GENERAL ORIENTATIONS
1. Certain industries, regions and groups in the labour
force have been particularly hard hit by the sequence of
events since the early 1970s the synchronous boom, inflation
and the oil crisis which have changed relative prices, cost
structures and patterns of demand. Adjustment to these
changes has been rendered more difficult and painful by slow
growth, high unemployment and longer-run trends which have
increased fixed costs.
2. Given the persistence of abnormally high unemployment
there has been a short-term case to cushion the impact of
these changes by selective measures designed to maintain
existing employment and preserve existing productive
capacity. Over time, however, there is likely to be a
deterioration in the tradeoff between the short-term
economic and social benefits from such measures and their
longer-run costs. Action to provide help at the specific
point at which labour is about to be laid off, or producers
to go out of business, will, if rolled forward, often turn
out to be action to support employment where labour is being
used least efficiently or to produce products for which
there is no longer a market. The economy will gradually
become both less productive and more inflation prone.
Moreover, such domestic measures may have much the same
effect as protection at the frontier in enabling inefficient
producers to compete with foreign suppliers and in delaying
necessary structural adjustments. They may both create a
vested interest in protection in the country concerned, and
provoke protectionist reactions in other countries.
3. A more constructive approach is to further adjustment
to new conditions, relying as much as possible on market
forces to encourage mobility of labour and capital to their
most productive uses. At the same time, governments are
pursuing other social and political objectives concerning
the social and physical environments, the distribution of
income, and the fair sharing of the burden of adjustment to
structural change. It is essential, however, that these
goals should be sought through policies which minimise any
resulting costs in terms of reduced economic efficiency.
4. It is difficult for countries to shift away from
defensive action to prop up weak sectors unless overall
demand is rising fast enough to provide alternative
employment elsewhere. Equally, however, a progressive shift
away from defensive policies is necessary, along with
appropriate macro-economic policies, to ensure sustained
growth. Otherwise, with labour and capital locked into
declining activities, bottlenecks will emerge and renewed
inflation will constrain expansionary policies and undermine
the recovery. A progressive shift to more positive
adjustment policies must, therefore, be an integral part of
the programme of concerted action for more sustained and
better balanced growth in the world economy.
5. While there is a close interrelationship between growth
and adjustment policies, it should not be interpreted
rigidly. In some cases, action can and should be taken in
advance of achieving faster growth This applies generally to
measures designed to avoid introducing further rigidities
into the economic system or to alleviate existing ones. It
may also apply where the budgetary costs have become too
high, or where labour and capital need to be shifted in the
interest of improving the competitive strength of countries
with a weak balance of payments, or of shifting resources
away from the export sector in countries with an excessively
strong external position. On the other hand, there may be
cases where the phasing out of temporary measures with a
high short-term social return and relatively low short-term
economic cost can be left until appreciable progress has
been made in reducing unemployment.
6. In sum, a reasonably strong rise in aggregate demand
and the prospect of sustained growth are required if
governments are to shift to more positive adjustment
policies, but the rise in demand will not be sustainable
unless such a shift is started at the earliest possible
opportunity.
Industrial Policy
7. In responding to requests for help from enterprises in
the industrial sector in financial difficulty, it should be
recognised that under normal conditions there is usually a
presumption against selective action to assist loss-making
activities, in favour of more general measures. Where the
difficulties being encountered are mainly cyclical, they
will normally be best handled by measures to facilitate
access to external sources of finance and to raise demand
and improve profitability in the economy as a whole. Even
where the difficulties are more deepseated, reflecting
unanticipated adverse trends in demand or competition from
other sources of supply, special intervention will normally
only be justified if the economic or social costs of the
necessary adjustments are likely to be unacceptably high in
the short run, and cannot be adequately handled through
existing policies to ease the burdens of adjustment. Thus,
cases where specific action to protect or support individual
sectors or companies in financial difficulty can be
justified and are likely to be successful, should be
relatively rare.
8. Where, nevertheless, governments find it necessary to
intervene, experience has shown the importance of the
following criteria:
ii) Such action should be integrally linked to the
implementation of plans to phase out obsolete capacity
and re-establish financially viable entities, without,
however, seeking to raise prices above levels providing
an adequate return to efficient producers.
iii) The cost should be made as evident as possible
to decision-makers and the public at large. Careful
attention should be paid to the cost to consumers of action
which raises prices, to the cost to tax-payers, and
to the effects of subsidised competition on employment
elsewhere.
iv) Where public funds are being injected into the
private sector, it is desirable that private risk
capital should be involved.
v) Assistance given on a company-by-company basis
should be framed so as to provide an incentive for
improved management practices, notably by ensuring
sufficient domestic and international competition.
vi) Where the primary objective is to support
employment in particular regions or towns,
consideration should be given to action that can benefit any
eligible company in the area concerned, rather than only
those in financial difficulty.
vii) While recognising that governments must pay due
regard to the interests of national security, care
should be taken to see that arguments based on
considerations of self-sufficiency should not be misused to
justify measures for protection and support.
9. To varying degrees, OECD governments have tried to follow
industrial policies aimed at" picking the winners".
Experience shows, however, that this is far from easy,
particularly for industrial countries at the frontiers of
technological progress and changing patterns of consumption,
and possessing roughly similar factor endowments and
management skills.
10. There are, however, directions in which according to
country circumstances, policies based on rational economic
criteria may seek to supplement market forces in promoting
desirable developments. For example:
ii) Recent difficulties have caused many companies
to reduce long-term research in advanced technologies
involving large investments, in favour of research to meet
more immediate requirements. Governments should, therefore,
ensure that adequate incentives for long-term research
and development exist.
iii) Since much technological progress and response
to changed demands has come from small and medium-sized
companies, there is a good case for strengthening policies
designed to ensure that they have adequate access to venture
capital and incentives and opportunities to innovate,
specialise and modernise.
Employment and Manpower Policies
11. The longer slow growth continues, the more important it
becomes to ensure that measures to protect employment do not
preserve unviable industrial structures, impede
technological change and distort trade flows. The very
success of such policies in alleviating unemployment can
lead to strong pressures to carry them forward into the
medium term.
12. There is a particularly strong link here between the
conditions for sustained economic growth and a shift to more
positive adjustment policies. To meet longer-run economic
and social objectives:
ii) Job creation programmes should be targeted
more directly to benefit clearly- defined disadvantaged
groups encountering structural employment problems
(youth, women, minorities and other target groups).
As the general expansion of output gathers sufficient
momentum to bring about sustained reduction in unemployment:
iii) General incentives to prevent redundancies should
be phased out, or replaced by schemes which
encourage taking on additional workers in other activities.
iv) Temporary job creation schemes in the public sector
which merely serve to maintain employment in place
of income support should be scaled down, while
continuing to develop programmes to meet legitimate needs
for increased public services.
13. Action is also necessary to reduce the rigidities and
distortions in the labour market which have become
increasingly apparent under conditions of slow growth:
ii) Companies ability to compete can be hampered
and distorted by arrangements for financing social
security which have the effect of levying a heavy tax on
employment, particularly on the lowest paid workers. This
introduces an unnecessary bias in favour of labour-
saving investment and against labour- intensive
activities which, paradoxically, the government may find
itself having to protect or subsidise to enable them to
compete with competition from" low wage" countries.
The situation in this respect varies greatly between
countries, but in some countries there appear to be
good grounds for shifting from what are, in effect,
taxes on the use of labour, to taxes on income or
expenditure.
iii) Better functioning of the labour market calls
for efforts by governments, unions and employers to
ensure that the structure of wages does not inhibit the
adjustment of labour supply to changing needs and adversely
affect the employment prospects of certain types of
labour.
14. The capacity and willingness of labour to adjust to
changing employment patterns is also influenced by the
arrangements for providing income support to the unemployed.
While such arrangements are essential to alleviate social
hardship, and to give workers time to find new jobs suited
to their needs and abilities, they should be carefully
designed to ensure that, over time, they do not unduly
affect attitudes to work and willingness to accept necessary
change. Under conditions of persistent slow growth, there is
also an increasing need for special employment programmes
directed to the long-term unemployed.
Agricultural Policy
15. Policies towards agriculture have traditionally been
influenced by broad social and political objectives, taking
into account different national conditions. As part of these
policies considerable emphasis has been put on increasing
agricultural productivity in OECD Member countries. Under
conditions of slow growth, these policies have helped to
support agricultural incomes and employment at a time when
there have been fewer employment opportunities for surplus
agricultural labour in the rest of the economy. Although, in
this respect, these policies have a stabilizing effect, they
involve risks and costs as set out in paragraphs 2 and 3.
Under present difficult conditions with continuing
inflationary dangers, it is particularly important to ensure
that agricultural policies, no less than the other policies
discussed above, are designed to achieve their social,
economic and political objectives at minimum cost to the
consumer and taxpayer without neglecting the legitimate
interests of the agricultural producers and while ensuring
the necessary overall food security. More generally, it is
advisable to seek improvement in the functioning of
agricultural markets as well as in their stabilization.
Regional Policy
16. A recent OECD review of regional policies noted that
there had been a shift towards assistance which was not
regionally differentiated but went to sectors or enterprises
facing severe structural problems or other difficulties. But
since such support will not help to develop viable new
industries in the weak regions, there will be a strong case
for shifting the emphasis progressively back to measures
more likely to be beneficial over the longer term, such as
the provision of infrastructure and regionally
differentiated fiscal arrangements.
Regulatory Policy
17. In order to increase the ability of the economy to
adjust to new conditions, governments could do more to
reduce the uncertainties and the additional costs caused by
their own policy actions. This implies efforts to avoid
unnecessary regulation and reporting requirements, and to
maintain better co-ordination, clarity and continuity in
government regulations, including those regarding safety,
health and the environment.
International Co-operation
18. Continuation of defensive measures and lack of longer-
run restructuring programmes in some countries will make it
politically difficult for others to pursue their own
adjustment policies. Collective agreement on the need to
shift from defensive to more positive adjustment policies in
the areas of industrial, employment and manpower,
agricultural, regional and regulatory policies, as part of a
concerted programme for more sustained and better balanced
growth, will make it easier for each Member country to
follow appropriate domestic policies, and to honour its
commitments under the OECD Trade Pledge. It is also an
affirmation of Member countries willingness to adjust to
changes in their trade in manufactures and other products
with developing countries. Continued efforts for co-
operation and co-ordination of adjustment policies in the
appropriate fora, whereby current and perspective
developments are reviewed, analysed and discussed, should
help governments to formulate policies which take into
account possible impacts on other countries and involve a
fair sharing of the costs of adjustment.
i) Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan,
Switzerland and the United Kingdom should ensure, by
appropriate measures as necessary, that the expansion
of their domestic demand is significantly greater than in
1977 or, where capacity is already fully utilised,
should ensure that total demand increases in line
with productive capacity. The Netherlands should consolidate
the effects of the boost in domestic demand which was
achieved last year. The scale and timing of
expansionary action by countries in this group should be
determined in the light of their internal and external
circumstances; in this respect a particular
responsibility lies with countries in a strong balance-of-
payments position. Such action should not
undermine anti-inflationary policies.
i) Reiterated their commitment to an open
multilateral trading system and decided to renew
the Declaration to this effect of 30th May, 1974, with a new
preamble which takes into account developments
since then and reflects the spirit in which they
intend to pursue its implementation (see Annex I).
i) Countries where energy pricing is still below
world levels should pay particular attention to this
element in energy policies since the price
mechanism is one of the most important instruments for
promoting increased efficiency of energy use and
for expanding energy supplies.
Annex II to the Communique of 1978
i) Action should be temporary and should, wherever
possible, be reduced progressively according to a
pre-arranged timetable.
i) There are certain areas where markets are unlikely
adequately to reflect and anticipate future economic
and social needs. This applies, for example, to
research and development and investment in producing and
saving energy; to improvements in environmental
quality, health care, urban infrastructure. etc.
i) There should be renewed emphasis on supply measures
such as training, mobility and placement to facilitate
adjustment to shifting demands, technological progress
and changing patterns of trade.
i) Improved job security cushions the impact of change
on individuals, gives them more time to adjust and
provides compensation for the economic and social costs
involved. At the same time, however, it may slow down
necessary shifts in employment and may inhibit the
investments called for by technological change; under
conditions of slow growth, it also discriminates against
those without jobs. In countries where this is a
serious problem, there is a good case for shifting more
of the costs of changing jobs (redundancy payments,
retraining, etc.) from employers to society as a whole,
either by taking them over directly or by providing
compensation through the tax or transfer system.
Source: Activities of OECD. Copyright OECD 1978. Reproduced by
permission of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development.
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