PART I
—
OUTLOOK
1. Europe Needs More Public Investment
Rocco Luigi Bubbico,
Philipp-Bastian Brutscher
and Debora Revoltella
Public investment went through a prolonged contractionary phase over the past
decade. Between 2008 and 2016 public investment in the European Union declined
from 3.4% of GDP to 2.7%. Despite a slight rebound in 2017 and 2018, public investment
still stands at only 2.9% of GDP, 15% below its pre-crisis levels.
Fiscal consolidation pressure was at the core of the decline in public investment.
This is witnessed by particularly strong falls in public investment in countries that
experienced a strong pressure to tighten their budgets. The negative efect of fscal
consolidation was in many cases amplifed by a re-prioritization of public outlays
away from investment towards current expenditures.
Infrastructure investment was disproportionately afected by the decline
in public investment. The European Investment Bank (EIB) estimates show that
overall infrastructure investment declined by about 25% between 2008 and 2016; with
the government sector accounting for the lion’s share of this fall. From a sectorial
perspective, investment in transport and education infrastructure experienced the
strongest decline.
The fall in government infrastructure investment does not refect a saturation
efect. About one in three municipalities in the EU report that infrastructure
investment activities in the last fve years were below needs. In addition, the fall in
infrastructure investment activities was particularly pronounced in regions with a
poor infrastructure quality to start with. Moreover, construction of new infrastructure
seems to continue producing large positive economic spillover efects (EIB 2018).
Overall, using a bottom-up approach, the annual infrastructure investment gap is
estimated to be about €155 bn.
Sound project selection, preparation and implementation are key to reversing the
negative trend in investment activities in the EU, in addition to overcoming funding
constraints. To ensure the efcient use of available funds, sound infrastructure