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Chapter 5 D : M
Chapter 5 D : M

... Three key fiscal parameters - revenue, fiscal and primary deficits measured relative to GDPindicate the extent of overall fiscal imbalances in the Finances of the Union or State Government during a specified period. The fiscal and revenue deficits relative to GDP as per Union Finance Accounts for 20 ...
aggregate demand and aggregate supply
aggregate demand and aggregate supply

... The aggregate expenditures model assumes that an increase/decrease in aggregate expenditures brings about an increase/decrease in total output at the existing or ‘going’ price level. The aggregate demand curve, by definition, merely relates the various possible price levels to the corresponding equi ...
ME1
ME1

... • In the "Keynesian cross diagram," a desired total spending (or aggregate expenditure, or "aggregate demand") curve (shown in blue) is drawn as a rising line since consumers will have a larger demand with a rise in disposable income, which increases with total national output. This increase is due ...
Living Standards During Previous Recessions
Living Standards During Previous Recessions

... the next two quarters and contracted again in 1992Q2. The recovery appears to have started in later 1992. We thus treat the early 1990s recession as lasting from 1990 to 1992. It should also be noted that the reductions in real GDP are a lot smaller than those observed during the previous two recess ...
Short description of models available in MMB 2.0
Short description of models available in MMB 2.0

... amount of hours. Clarida et al. (2002) introduce an exogenous time-varying elasticity of labor demand to vary the wage-mark-up over time. The system of equations is collapsed into an IS equation and a Phillips curve, which determine the output gap and inflation, conditional on the path of the nomina ...
The debt brake in Germany
The debt brake in Germany

... The debt brake in Germany – key aspects and implementation In 2009, the German parliament passed a fundamental reform of government borrowing rules. For central and state government, strict borrowing limits and the requirement for a structurally close-to-balance or balanced budget were constitutiona ...
Working  PaPer  SerieS ToWardS eXPendiTUre rULeS and FiScaL
Working PaPer SerieS ToWardS eXPendiTUre rULeS and FiScaL

... macroeconomic stability, financial integration, and growth convergence in Europe. However, EMU has also got a mixed record as regards public finances and public debt developments, the emergence of macroeconomic imbalances in some countries and the interplay between the two. A number of studies have ...
Does investment call the tune? Empirical evidence and
Does investment call the tune? Empirical evidence and

... investment and the lack of effective demand with unsold goods that characterizes recessions. Some authors who support the profit-squeeze hypothesis also seem to hold underconsumptionist views, since they deemphasize the role of investment in business cycles by claiming that, with a “relatively weak ...
- Munich Personal RePEc Archive
- Munich Personal RePEc Archive

... countries, they calculated the total value of exports of 21 commodities in 1975 and weight them by dividing the value of each commodity’s exports in 1975 by this total. The weights are then held constant for the rest of the exercise and are applied to the world ...
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES STABILIZING EXPECTATIONS UNDER MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY COORDINATION
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES STABILIZING EXPECTATIONS UNDER MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY COORDINATION

... of the central bank’s monetary policy rule are correctly understood so that agents make policy consistent forecasts. Within each scenario two regimes are considered: one with active monetary and passive …scal policy and one with passive monetary and active …scal policy. The central …nding of the pap ...
Coordinating Business Cycles ∗ Edouard Schaal Mathieu Taschereau-Dumouchel
Coordinating Business Cycles ∗ Edouard Schaal Mathieu Taschereau-Dumouchel

... Our paper belongs to a long tradition in macroeconomics that views recessions as episodes of coordination failures. In a seminal paper, Diamond (1982) proposes a search model of the goods market subject to a thick market externality. The model features multiple rational expectation equilibria that c ...
The Responsiveness of Remittances to Price of Oil: The Case
The Responsiveness of Remittances to Price of Oil: The Case

... spending, GDP per capita of the world, price of crude oil and the US federal fund rate.3 Using aggregate remittances raises a number of difficulties. First, some difficulties relate to the consistency of reporting as different countries use different labeling for remittances transactions. Second, a ...
2010-08-11 MFR of Arthur Laffer interview_1
2010-08-11 MFR of Arthur Laffer interview_1

... Fiscal stimulus greatly troubled Laffer. Laffer who says there is no Keynesian Multiplier, or no free lunch, says that fiscal transfers do not stimulate: “There is not stimulus in the stimulus plans.” Laffer gave several examples of how a “stimulus” plan works. This included an economy made of fixed ...
Macroeconomic Shocks and Their Propagation
Macroeconomic Shocks and Their Propagation

Towards a better measurement of welfare and inequalities
Towards a better measurement of welfare and inequalities

... particular at the bottom and at the top of the distribution, in order to have a better picture of the sharing of the benefits of economic growth (and likewise the distributional impact of a recession). The comparative analysis across the EU is complex. Section 3 will analyse real growth in median in ...
Keynes`s economics and the question of public debt
Keynes`s economics and the question of public debt

... distinction between the government’s current and capital budgetary items. Keynes opposed discretionary budget deficits of current expenditures over current revenue. However, Keynes did maintain that public capital expenditures should be at least partly debt-financed. As such, Keynes’s concern was w ...
Aggregate Supply-Driven Deflation and Its Implications for Macroeconomic Stability David Beckworth
Aggregate Supply-Driven Deflation and Its Implications for Macroeconomic Stability David Beckworth

... also find the zero bound on the nominal interest rate was rarely reached and never happened in the context of good deflation. Bordo and Filardo (2005), in a similar study, examine 30 countries over the last two centuries and also come up with the good, bad, and ugly types of deflation. They note tha ...
The relevance of Keynes
The relevance of Keynes

... process on the maintenance of group differentials. Groups of workers bargain for relative shares with other workers, so no group will be the first to accept a wage cut that might leave them worse off than others; forward contracts also suit employers and unions because they are a way of hedging agai ...
TAX POLICY AND ECONOMIC GROWTH*
TAX POLICY AND ECONOMIC GROWTH*

... point of equilibrium: A+B+C. On the other hand, producer surplus is a benefit that a producer gains in the market. It is defined as a value that the producer gets for his goods in the market, minus cost of production of these goods. It is the surface between the supply curve and the price in the poi ...
On the determinants of firms` financial surpluses and deficits
On the determinants of firms` financial surpluses and deficits

... of investments. Moreover firms reduced leverage and the share of operating assets in total assets. These trends were stronger among the more credit constrained and the less dynamic firms. While there is a broad consensus on the effect of investments on net lending/net borrowing, the evidence is more ...
CSR country annex - The European Anti
CSR country annex - The European Anti

... No mention of poverty. Main priority is on reducing deficit and debt. Investment is prioritized in “knowledgebased capital” and R+D, not social investment. Recommendation on taxation, which is distortive to growth, rather than supporting more progressive taxation. No proposals to ensure adequate of ...
What is social expenditure - OECD.Stat
What is social expenditure - OECD.Stat

... expenditure items (spending by General government, central government, local government and social security funds, see OECD 2006a), although national sources may provide more detail. For example, Statistics Canada reports about 20 items on public social transfers in Canada (www.statcan.ca). ...
A-level Economics Mark Scheme Unit 02
A-level Economics Mark Scheme Unit 02

... for explaining why it might lead to a fall in investment. Recession (2) means that consumer spending (or aggregate demand) falls (2), hence firms will have less need to increase capacity (2), their profits are likely to be falling (2) and so they are likely to cut back on investment to ensure their ...
Fiscal Policy for Development in the Dominican Republic
Fiscal Policy for Development in the Dominican Republic

... Dominican Republic government to contribute to the debate on the country’s fiscal challenges and its options for reform. The team was composed of Ana Cebreiro (CTP), Christian Daude (DEV) and Hamlet Gutiérrez (DEV). Christian Daude co-ordinated the report. The team visited the Dominican Republic in ...
IEW Working Paper #91
IEW Working Paper #91

... To test the hypothesis of a long-run relationship between income and government spending which is in line with Wagner’s interpretation that there is not necessarily a cause and effect relationship between the variables, we employ cointegration analysis suggested by Johansen (1988) and Johansen and J ...
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Fiscal multiplier

In economics, the fiscal multiplier (not to be confused with monetary multiplier) is the ratio of a change in national income to the change in government spending that causes it. More generally, the exogenous spending multiplier is the ratio of a change in national income to any autonomous change in spending (private investment spending, consumer spending, government spending, or spending by foreigners on the country's exports) that causes it. When this multiplier exceeds one, the enhanced effect on national income is called the multiplier effect. The mechanism that can give rise to a multiplier effect is that an initial incremental amount of spending can lead to increased consumption spending, increasing income further and hence further increasing consumption, etc., resulting in an overall increase in national income greater than the initial incremental amount of spending. In other words, an initial change in aggregate demand may cause a change in aggregate output (and hence the aggregate income that it generates) that is a multiple of the initial change.The existence of a multiplier effect was initially proposed by Keynes student Richard Kahn in 1930 and published in 1931. Some other schools of economic thought reject or downplay the importance of multiplier effects, particularly in terms of the long run. The multiplier effect has been used as an argument for the efficacy of government spending or taxation relief to stimulate aggregate demand.In certain cases multiplier values less than one have been empirically measured (an example is sports stadiums), suggesting that certain types of government spending crowd out private investment or consumer spending that would have otherwise taken place. This crowding out can occur because the initial increase in spending may cause an increase in interest rates or in the price level. In 2009, The Economist magazine noted ""economists are in fact deeply divided about how well, or indeed whether, such stimulus works"", partly because of a lack of empirical data from non-military based stimulus. New evidence came from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, whose benefits were projected based on fiscal multipliers and which was in fact followed - from 2010 to 2012 - by a slowing of job loss and private sector job growth.
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