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Fiscal Policy in a Depressed Economy

J. Bradford DeLong, +1 more
- Vol. 2012, Iss: 1, pp 233-297
TLDR
In a depressed economy, with short-term nominal interest rates at their zero lower bound, ample cyclical unemployment, and excess capacity, increased government purchases would be neither offset by the monetary authority raising interest rates nor neutralized by supply-side bottlenecks.
Abstract
In a depressed economy, with short-term nominal interest rates at their zero lower bound, ample cyclical unemployment, and excess capacity, increased government purchases would be neither offset by the monetary authority raising interest rates nor neutralized by supply-side bottlenecks Then even a small amount of hysteresis—even a small shadow cast on future potential output by the cyclical downturn—means, by simple arithmetic, that expansionary fiscal policy is likely to be self-financing Even if it is not, it is highly likely to pass the sensible benefit-cost test of raising the present value of future potential output Thus, at the zero bound, where the central bank cannot or will not but in any event does not perform its full role in stabilization policy, fiscal policy has the stabilization policy mission that others have convincingly argued it lacks in normal times Whereas many economists have assumed that the path of potential output is invariant to even a deep and prolonged downturn, the available evidence raises a strong fear that hysteresis is indeed a factor Although nothing in our analysis calls into question the importance of sustainable fiscal policies, it strongly suggests the need for caution regarding the pace of fiscal consolidation

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The European Sovereign Debt Crisis

TL;DR: The origin and propagation of the European sovereign debt crisis can be attributed to the flawed original design of the euro as discussed by the authors, and there was an incomplete understanding of the fragility of a monetary union under crisis conditions, especially in the absence of banking union and other European-level buffer mechanisms.
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Government Spending Multipliers in Good Times and in Bad: Evidence from U.S. Historical Data

TL;DR: The authors investigated whether U.S. government spending multipliers differ according to two potentially important features of the economy: (1) the amount of slack and (2) whether interest rates are near the zero lower bound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Public debt and economic growth: Is there a causal effect?

TL;DR: This article used an instrumental variable approach to study whether public debt has a causal effect on economic growth in a sample of OECD countries and found that there is no evidence that public debt is associated with economic growth.
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Public Debt and Low Interest Rates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the costs of public debt when safe interest rates are low and develop four main arguments for public debt rollovers, including the existence of multiple equilibria where investors believe debt to be risky and, by requiring a risk premium, increase the fiscal burden and make debt effectively more risky.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Labor Market Rigidities: At the Root of Unemployment in Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the major institutional changes at the root of the increase in the west European unemployment trade in the last quarter century from below 3 percent to 11 percent, and found that the institutional characteristics of wage bargaining and the legal rules hamper the self-equilibrating function of the labor market.
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The Aggregate Demand for Treasury Debt

TL;DR: This paper showed that changes in Treasury supply have large effects on a variety of yield spreads and showed that Treasury yields are reduced by 73 basis points, on average, from 1926 to 2008.
Journal ArticleDOI

Costly Capital Reallocation and the Effects of Government Spending

TL;DR: The authors analyzed the effects of sector-specific changes in government spending in a two-sector dynamic general equilibrium model in which the reallocation of capital across sectors is costly and showed that the behavior of macroeconomic aggregates is consistent with the predictions of a multi-sector neoclassical model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can Government Purchases Stimulate the Economy

TL;DR: The authors assess the likely range of multiplier values for the experiment most relevant to the stimulus package debate: a temporary, deficit-financed increase in government purchases, and conclude that the multiplier for this type of spending is probably between 0.8 and 1.5.
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Fiscal Stimulus in a Monetary Union: Evidence from U.S. Regions

TL;DR: This paper used historical data on military procurement to estimate the effects of government spending and developed a framework for interpreting this estimate and relating it to estimates of the standard closed economy aggregate multiplier, which is highly sensitive to how strongly aggregate monetary and tax policy “leans against the wind.
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