What Determines Government Spending Multipliers?
Author/Editor: Giancarlo Corsetti, André Meier, Gernot Müller
Release Date: © June, 2012
ISBN
: 978-1-47550-421-7
Stock #: WPIEA2012150
English
Stock Status: On back-order
Languages and formats available
| English | French | Spanish | Arabic | Russian | Chinese | Portuguese | |
| Paperback | Yes | ||||||
| Yes |
Description
This paper studies how the effects of government spending vary with the economic environment. Using a panel of OECD countries, we identify fiscal shocks as residuals from an estimated spending rule and trace their macroeconomic impact under different conditions regarding the exchange rate regime, public indebtedness, and health of the financial system. The unconditional responses to a positive spending shock broadly confirm earlier findings. However, conditional responses differ systematically across exchange rate regimes, as real appreciation and external deficits occur mainly under currency pegs. We also find output and consumption multipliers to be unusually high during times of financial crisis.
Taxonomy
Economic policy , Financial crisis , Fiscal policy , International financial system
More publications in this series: Working Papers
More publications by: Giancarlo Corsetti ; André Meier ; Gernot Müller
