Investment and Investment Finance
in Europe
2015
KEY FINDINGS
European Investment Bank Investment and Investment Finance in Europe
1
Investing in competitiveness
Key findings EIB Economics Department
European prosperity depends on the productivity of EU firms and their ability to compete and perform high value added activities within integrated global production systems. Competitive markets, investments in tangible and intangible assets and the efficient reallocation of resources to high productivity firms and activities are critical enablers for productivity growth. However, investment in Europe remains depressed, with infrastructure investment flagging and more investment needed in R&D and other intangible assets that are increasingly important to competitiveness. Europe has shortcomings in the efficiency of labour and capital reallocation, while the impact of the crisis on the investment environment is aggravating these structural failures. A complementary structural and counter-cyclical approach is needed that addresses both the immediate outlook for investment and the long-term competitiveness of the EU economy.
KEY FINDINGS
Investment and Investment Finance in Europe European Investment Bank
2
Investing in competitiveness – getting the conditions right for firm productivity growthEurope is as competitive as its firms. Competiveness depends on firm productivity, which depends on innovation, and reallocation (creative destruction). In an increasingly open world, it is becoming ever more important that firms are able to perform high value added activities within global integrated production chains.
Competitive and flexible markets promote productivity growth. Institutional conditions such as ease of firm entries and exits, flexible labour markets and open markets for goods and services are essential conditions creating incentives for high productivity growth.
Investment plays a critical role in enhancing competition and providing foundations for high value-added activity. Competitiveness-enhancing areas of public and private investment include: research, R&D, education and training, and other intangible assets; and infrastructure investments, particularly in sectors like energy and ITC (broadband networks) that can both improve efficiency and remove barriers to competition.
A well-functioning and diversified financial sector is crucial for the efficient reallocation of resources towards more productive activities. The innovation process requires not only finance for activity such as R&D within established firms, but also risk-taking finance adapted to the needs of innovative start-ups and growth stage firms and that can focus financial resources efficiently on growth opportunities. Targeted and well-managed risk-absorbing finance is also needed to ensure long-term investment in public goods such as infrastructure.
KEY FINDINGS
European Investment Bank Investment and Investment Finance in Europe
3
Is Europe investing enough?
European investment in tangible assets remains weak…EU gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) remains weak relative to GDP levels, despite picking up slightly in 2013. Its growth remains about one half of the rate of increase in the US. Depressed investment in dwellings and other structures including infrastructure continues to weigh heavily on overall investment figures. Public investment continues to fall, particularly in the vulnerable Member States (since 2009) and cohesion countries (since 2011).
Figure 1 Evolution of GFCF in the EU, US and Japan
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
VMSCore countries
Cohesion countries
2007
Q1
2007
Q3
2008
Q1
2008
Q3
2009
Q1
2009
Q3
2010
Q1
2010
Q3
2011
Q1
2011
Q3
2012
Q1
2012
Q3
2013
Q1
2013
Q3
2014
Q1
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
EUUS JP
2007
Q1
2007
Q3
2008
Q1
2008
Q3
2009
Q1
2009
Q3
2010
Q1
2010
Q3
2011
Q1
2011
Q3
2012
Q1
2012
Q3
2013
Q1
2013
Q3
2014
Q1
Note: Gross Fixed Capital Formation. Index average 2008 = 100. Source: Eurostat, OECD.
…with infrastructure investment fallingLatest figures suggest a continued decline in infrastructure investment, with both government and private investment in this sector falling in parallel since 2011.
Figure 2 Real infrastructure investment
80
85
90
95
100
105
110
Corporate sectorGovernment
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
70
75
80
85
90
95
100
105
110
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
VMSCore countries
Cohesion countries
Source: Eurostat, EIB staff calculations.Notes: “Core countries” include Austria, Belgium, Germany, Denmark, Finland, France, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Sweden and
the UK; “VMS” includes Cyprus, Greece, Spain, Ireland, Italy, Slovenia and Portugal; “Cohesion countries” include Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Croatia, Hungary, Lithuania, Latvia, Malta, Poland, Romania and Slovakia.
KEY FINDINGS
Investment and Investment Finance in Europe European Investment Bank
4
More investment is needed in intangible assets…Productivity growth and competitiveness is increasingly linked to investment in intangible assets such as software, data, R&D, designs, advertising, worker training and new organisational processes. Investment in these assets is closely linked to GDP per capita and to the ability of firms to compete globally in high-tech, high value added sectors, and also to the diverse financing opportunities provided by well-developed capital markets. EU firms – particularly SMEs that also invest less in intangible assets than larger firms – report that high investment costs, limited public financial support and unfavourable tax treatment are the main barriers to greater investment in these assets.
Figure 3 GDP per capita, market capitalisation and investment in intangible assets (2006-2010)
GDP per capita (EUR PPP)
Inta
ngib
le in
vest
men
t (%
of G
DP)
AT
BE CZ DK FI
FR
DE
GR
IE IT
NL
PT
SI
ES
UK SE
US
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
10000 15000 20000 25000
AT
BE
CZ DK FI FR
DE
GR
IE
IT
NL
PT
SI
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SE UK
US
0%
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15000 20000 25000 30000 35000
Inta
ngib
le in
vest
men
t (%
of G
DP)
GDP per capita (EUR PPP)
Source: INTAN-Invest, AMECO and Eurostat.
…including R&DAt 2% of GDP, R&D expenditure remains well below levels in other advanced economies such as the US and Japan, and well below the EU 2020 target of 3%, undermining the ability of EU firms to compete at the high value-added technology frontier. EU business investment in R&D remains low because of continued relative specialisation in medium-tech, and because there are relatively few young leading innovators in high-tech sectors. EU government and higher education R&D intensity is comparatively high, although fiscal constraints have started to weigh on this investment, and industry-science links and specialisation in strategic technologies are said to be weak points.
Figure 4 Evolution of business and higher education R&D intensities in selected countries
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Business R&D intensity
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1996
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Higher education R&D intensity
EU28 JPNUSA KOR CHN
Busi
ness
R&D
as
% o
f GD
P
Hig
her e
duca
tion
R&D
as
% o
f GD
P
Source: OECD, Main Science and Technology Indicators
AT
BE
CZ
DK
FI
FR DE
GR
IE IT
NL
PT
SI
ES
SE UK
US
0%
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4%
6%
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0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 120% 140% 160%
Inta
ngib
le in
vest
men
t (%
of G
DP)
Market capitalisation (% of GDP)
Averages over 1995-1999
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BE
CZ DK
FI
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DE
GR
IE IT
NL
PT
SI
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SE UK
US
0%
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25% 50% 75% 100% 125%
Inta
ngib
le in
vest
men
t (%
of G
DP)
Market capitalisation (% of GDP)
Averages over 2006-2010
KEY FINDINGS
European Investment Bank Investment and Investment Finance in Europe
5
What is holding back investment?
Weak incentives for risk-taking investment, amid ample liquidityThe EU became a significant net exporter of capital in 2011, and exported 7% of gross savings, or around EUR 200bn, in 2013. This reflects market perceptions of low risk-adjusted returns in the EU and deleveraging by non-financial corporations which have become net-lenders to the rest of the economy. Main drivers of weak investment include:• Weak expectations of demand.• High levels of uncertainty. • High levels of NFC leverage (particularly in relation to expectations for firm growth). • Reduced banking sector appetite for risk posing a potential constraint on recovery. • Underdevelopment of risk-bearing capital market and equity-based financing alternatives.
SMEs, in particular, face a difficult investment environmentPerceptions of the risk of lending to small businesses have increased, with the spread between Euro Area retail interest rates on large and small loans showing little sign of contraction following its dramatic rise in 2011-2012. SMEs suffered further from their overwhelming dependency on banks for external finance and the relative lack of equity financing options in most European countries. Unsurprisingly, SMEs are most likely to report access to finance constraints in those European countries where banking sectors have been hardest-hit by the crisis.
Figure 5 Gross EU savings and net foreign funding (EUR bn)
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
Foreign fundingDomestic gross savingsup to EUR 0.25m (small loans)over EUR 1m (large loans)
Domestic gross savings exported abroad
GCF
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
EUInterest rate (%)
06/1
008
/10
10/1
012
/10
02/1
104
/11
06/1
108
/11
10/1
112
/11
02/1
204
/12
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208
/12
10/1
212
/12
02/1
304
/13
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308
/13
10/1
312
/13
02/1
404
/14
06/1
408
/14
10/1
4
1,5
2,0
2,5
3,0
3,5
4,0
4,5
5,0
Source: AMECO.
Figure 6 Euro Area interest rates on new large and small loans to NFCs
Source: EIF, ECB.
KEY FINDINGS
Investment and Investment Finance in Europe European Investment Bank
6
The structure of EU economies needs to keep evolving to maintain competitiveness…
The structure of EU industries and exports has been evolving to keep pace with global trends: • An EU-wide shift from low-tech to high tech industries, led by Germany and central-eastern Europe
and in line with the shifting composition of world trade. • The rising share of business services in GDP and value added exports, partly because high-tech
industries have a stronger carrier function for services. • Increasing integration within global value chains, with manufacturing job losses largely offset so far
by the increased role of services.
Future productivity growth and trade performance will depend on continued restructuring and a greater focus on high value added activities. Maintaining competitiveness in labour-cost sensitive medium and low tech industries (still prevalent in southern Europe) and in low-tech activities (such as assembly) within high-tech industries will become increasingly hard.
…yet the efficient reallocation of resources to higher productivity firms and sectors remains a key challenge for Europe Enhancing competitiveness entails reallocating labour and capital resources from less productive firms and sectors to more productive activities, including young innovative firms. There are wide variations across Europe in allocative efficiency, a measure of the relative concentration of resources in high productivity firms. Allocative efficiency appears lower in all EU countries examined (apart from Sweden) than estimates for the US. Reasons may include institutional barriers to firm entries and exits, labour market inflexibility, over dependence on bank finance and relatively less developed (private) equity markets.
Figure 7 Allocative efficiency in selected EU countries, 2005-2011
South Sudan
Note: Allocative efficiency estimates the percentage increase in aggregate productivity compared to a situation where activity is randomly allocated to firms. EIB calculations based on Bureau van Dijk: Orbis data.
< 0.2
0.2 - 0.3
0.3 - 0.4
> 0.4
KEY FINDINGS
European Investment Bank Investment and Investment Finance in Europe
7
How can we enhance competitiveness?To compete in an increasingly open world, a dynamic economy is critical. This means innovation to be at the technological frontier or to move towards the frontier, and an economy that can respond rapidly to new growth opportunities. Public intervention needs to create the right environment for this process.
There is scope in Europe for a complementary counter-cyclical and structural approach which can generate the right incentives for investment to restart. Counter-cyclical policy can be well-justified if, for example, it targets the maintenance of competitiveness-enhancing investments over the cycle.
There is a role for both “horizontal” and “vertical” industrial policy to address structural issues. Horizontal policies need to include: • Structural reforms to enhance competition and the reallocation of resources to more productive
firms, such as deepening the internal market or promotion of labour mobility.• Greater investment in research, education and infrastructure – especially where this enhances market
competition. • Financial market reforms to encourage better provision of risk-bearing financing for young innovative
firms and other innovation activities, including through venture capital, high quality securitisation and greater use of credit guarantees.
Vertically targeted intervention is important, but how it is done matters: • It is needed to address externalities and financing constraints and to ensure that strategic long-term
issues – such as climate change or the need to be at the frontier in key emerging technologies - are addressed by the innovation process.
• It should create incentives for firm-level innovation without undermining product market competition. This can be achieved by targeting activities, not specific firms, with clear and verifiable criteria for selecting activities and good governance to prevent capture.
KEY FINDINGS
Investment and Investment Finance in Europe European Investment Bank
8
About the report
Investment and Investment Finance in Europe: Investing in Competitiveness – 2015 is a major annual research report by the European Investment Bank (EIB) Economics Department, produced to accompany the 2015 EIB Economics Conference. It responds to the need for a better understanding of the role of investment policy in enhancing economic competitiveness.
Combining in-house research and work by leading academics, the report assesses the continuing impact of the crisis on investment in tangible and intangible assets, and on the financing of these investments. It also examines what competitiveness means in an increasingly open and integrated global marketplace and the key principles that competitiveness enhancing economic policy needs to follow.
The authors of the report are as follows. Chapters 1 and 4: Atanas Kolev and Philipp-Bastian Brutscher (EIB); Chapter 2: Christoph Weiss (EIB); Chapter 3: Tanja Tanayama, (EIB); Chapter 5: Helmut Kraemer-Eis, Frank Lang and Salome Gvetadze (European Investment Fund); Chapter 6: Philippe Aghion (Harvard university, NBER and CIFAR); Chapter 7: Filippo di Mauro and Maddalena Ronchi (ECB); Chapter 8: Tim Bending (EIB); and Chapter 9: Atanas Kolev and Tanja Tanayama (EIB).
2015
European Investment Bank98 -100, boulevard Konrad AdenauerL-2950 Luxembourg3 +352 4379-15 +352 4377-04www.eib.org/economics U [email protected]
© EIB – 2/2015 – QH-04-15-040-EN-C – ISBN 978-92-861-2132-6 – doi: 10.2867/84451 – © EIB GraphicTeam 2015
Investment and Investment Finance
in Europe
Investing in competitiveness
Inve
stm
ent a
nd In
vest
men
t Fin
ance
in E
urop
e
Inv
estin
g in
com
petit
iven
ess
The European Investment Bank
The EIB is the bank of the European Union. As the world’s largest multilateral borrower and lender, we provide finance and expertise for sound and sustainable investment projects, mostly in the EU. We are owned by the 28 Member States and the projects we support contribute to furthering EU policy objectives. Under our external mandates, we also help to implement the financial pillar of the EU’s foreign policy.
About the Economics Department of the EIB
The mission of the EIB Economics Department is to provide economic analyses and studies to support the Bank in its operations and in the definition of its positioning, strategy and policy. The Department, a team of 30 economists and technical staff, is headed by Debora Revoltella, Director of Economics.
DisclaimerThe views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the position of the EIB.
European Investment Bank98 -100, boulevard Konrad AdenauerL-2950 Luxembourg3 +352 4379-15 +352 4377-04www.eib.org/economics U [email protected]
© EIB – 02/2015 – © EIB GraphicTeam
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