Policy uncertainty (also called regime uncertainty) is a class of
economic risk where the future path of government policy is uncertain, raising
risk premia and leading businesses and individuals to delay spending and investment until this
uncertainty has been resolved.
Policy uncertainty may refer to uncertainty about monetary or fiscal policy, the
tax or regulatory regime, or uncertainty over electoral outcomes that will influence political leadership.
The Great Recession
During the
Great Recession of the late 2000s and the years following it, many academics, policymakers, and business leaders have asserted that levels of policy uncertainty had risen dramatically and had contributed to the depth of the recession and the weakness of the following recovery.
United States
Much of the policy uncertainty in the United States has revolved around
fiscal policy as well as uncertainty over the
tax code. This is best exemplified by
partisan
Partisan may refer to:
Military
* Partisan (weapon), a pole weapon
* Partisan (military), paramilitary forces engaged behind the front line
Films
* ''Partisan'' (film), a 2015 Australian film
* ''Hell River'', a 1974 Yugoslavian film also know ...
fights in the
United States Congress over the
Fiscal Cliff and raising the
debt ceiling.
In addition, important pieces of environmental, energy, healthcare, and
financial regulation
Financial regulation is a form of regulation or supervision, which subjects financial institutions to certain requirements, restrictions and guidelines, aiming to maintain the stability and integrity of the financial system. This may be handled ...
were disputed in Congress and the wider political arena during these years.
Europe
Policy uncertainty in Europe has been an issue due to uncertainty over the
European Sovereign Debt Crisis and its possible outcomes. The future path of government spending, potential
bailouts,
monetary policy by the
European Central Bank have been widely speculated on, making for a highly uncertain business environment.
Risks versus uncertainty
Frank Hyneman Knight
Frank Hyneman Knight (November 7, 1885 – April 15, 1972) was an American economist who spent most of his career at the University of Chicago, where he became one of the founders of the Chicago School. Nobel laureates Milton Friedman, George S ...
(1885 - 1972), one of the founders of the
Chicago school, known for his ''Risk Uncertainty and Profit'',
a monumental study of the role of the entrepreneur in economic life in which he distinguished between
economic risk and so-called
Knightian uncertainty
In economics, Knightian uncertainty is a lack of any quantifiable knowledge about some possible occurrence, as opposed to the presence of quantifiable risk (e.g., that in statistical noise or a parameter's confidence interval). The concept acknow ...
.
Situations with risk were those where the outcomes were unknown but governed by
probability distribution
In probability theory and statistics, a probability distribution is the mathematical function that gives the probabilities of occurrence of different possible outcomes for an experiment. It is a mathematical description of a random phenomenon i ...
s known at the outset. He argued that these situations, where decision making rules such as maximising expected utility can be applied, differ in a deep way from "uncertain" ones, where the outcomes were likewise random, but governed by an unknown probability model. Knight argued that uncertainty gave rise to
economic profits that
perfect competition
In economics, specifically general equilibrium theory, a perfect market, also known as an atomistic market, is defined by several idealizing conditions, collectively called perfect competition, or atomistic competition. In Economic model, theoret ...
could not eliminate.
Regime uncertainty
A related concept developed by
Robert Higgs
Robert Higgs (born 1 February 1944) is an American economic historian and economist combining material from Public Choice, the New institutional economics, and the Austrian school of economics; and describes himself as a " libertarian anarchis ...
,
[Robert Higgs]
"Regime Uncertainty - Why the Great Depression Lasted So Long and Why Prosperity Resumed after the War"
(pdf), The Independent Review, Vol, I, No. 4, Spring 1997. regime uncertainty is about more than the government's laws, regulations, and administrative decisions. For one thing, as the saying goes, "personnel is policy." A business-hostile administration will provoke more apprehension among investors than a business-friendlier administration, even if the underlying "rules of the game" are identical on paper. Similar differences between judiciaries create uncertainties about how the courts will rule on contested laws and government actions.
Additionally, seemingly neutral changes in policies or personnel may have major implications for specific types of investment. Even when government changes the rules in a way that seemingly strengthens private-property rights overall, the action's specific form may jeopardize particular types of investment, and apprehension about such a threat may paralyze investors in these areas. Moreover, it may also give pause to investors in other areas, who fear that what the government has done to harm others today, it may do to them tomorrow. In sum, heightened uncertainty in general — a perceived increase in the potential variance of all sorts of relevant government action — may deter investment even if expectations shift toward more secure private-property rights.
[Robert Higgs]
"Regime Uncertainty: Some Clarifications"
References
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Risk
Great Recession
United States fiscal cliff