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Austerity, Assistance and Institutions: Lessons from the Greek Sovereign Debt Crisis

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In this paper, the authors studied the Greek sovereign debt crisis in the aftermath of the 2007-8 global financial crisis looking for barriers to, and engines of, growth, and found that the adopted economic adjustment program (the fiscal austerity mix combined with the fiscal and monetary assistance provided by the EU, ECB and IMF), jointly with the observed deterioration in institutional quality (the degree of protection of property rights) can explain most (around 22% of GDP) of the cumulative loss in GDP in the data (around 26%of GDP) between 2008 and 2016.
Abstract
This paper studies the Greek sovereign debt crisis in the aftermath of the 2007-8 global financial crisis looking for barriers to, and engines of, growth. The vehicle is a calibrated medium-scale micro-founded macroeconomic model. Departing from 2008, our simulations show that the adopted economic adjustment program (the fiscal austerity mix combined with the fiscal and monetary assistance provided by the EU, ECB and IMF), jointly with the observed deterioration in institutional quality (the degree of protection of property rights) can explain most (around 22% of GDP) of the cumulative loss in GDP in the data (around 26% of GDP) between 2008 and 2016. In particular, the economic adjustment program can explain a fall of around 12%, while the deterioration in property rights accounts for another 10%. Counterfactual simulations, on the other hand, show that this loss could have been around 9% only, if the country had followed a different fiscal policy mix; if the degree of product marker liberalization was closer to that in the core euro zone countries; and, above all, if institutional quality in Greece had simply remained at its pre-crisis level. On the other hand, in the absence of the official fiscal bailouts, the depression would be much deeper, while, the accommodative role played by the quantitative policies of the ECB has been vital to the Greek economy. These results can be useful in the face of the ongoing covid-19 crisis.

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The ECB's policy, the Recovery Fund and the importance of trust and fiscal corrections: The case of Greece

TL;DR: In this article , the efficacy of various policy measures taken, at national and European Union level, to cushion the effects of the pandemic shock is studied. But, the results also show that trust is important because, if the fear of debt default and risk premia re-emerge, the effects will be detrimental.
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Who benefits from international fiscal cooperation? The role of cross-country asymmetries

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References
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A model of unconventional monetary policy

TL;DR: The authors developed a quantitative monetary DSGE model with financial intermediaries that face endogenously determined balance sheet constraints and used the model to evaluate the effects of the central bank using unconventional monetary policy to combat a simulated financial crisis.
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Monetary Theory and Policy

Carl E. Walsh
TL;DR: In this article, empirical evidence on money and output is presented, including the Tobin effect and the MIU approximation problems, and a general equilibrium framework for monetary analysis is presented.
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Financial Intermediation and Credit Policy in Business Cycle Analysis

TL;DR: The authors developed a canonical framework to think about credit market frictions and aggregate economic activity in the context of the current crisis, and used the framework to address two issues in particular: first, how disruptions in financial intermediation can induce a crisis that affects real activity; and second, how various credit market interventions by the central bank and the Treasury of the type we have seen recently, might work to mitigate the crisis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Closing Small Open Economy Models

TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitative comparison of five alternative models for the small open economy model with incomplete asset markets is presented, and the main finding of the comparison is that all models deliver virtually identical dynamics at business cycle frequencies, as measured by unconditional second moments and impulse response functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Allocation of Talent: Implications for Growth

TL;DR: This paper found that countries with a higher proportion of engineering college majors grow faster than countries with lower proportion of law concentrators, whereas countries with high proportion of business concentrators grow more slowly.
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