2018
DOI: 10.1111/sjoe.12269
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Expansionary Contractions and Fiscal Free Lunches: Too Good To Be True?

Abstract: This paper builds a framework to jointly examine the possibilities of both expansionary fiscal contractions (austerity increasing output) and fiscal free lunches (expansions reducing government debt), arguments which in recent debates have been supported by the austerity and stimulus camps, respectively. We propose a new metric quantifying the budgetary implications of fiscal action, a key aspect of fiscal policy particularly at the monetary zero lower bound. We find that austerity needs to be highly persisten… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Stronger elasticities between debt and output multipliers at the monetary zero lower bound are observed (which is consistent with Erceg and Lindé ; McManus et al. ; who find fiscal free lunches at output multipliers of approximately 2) which is as a result of lower interest rates arising from (for example) expansionary policy, as interest rates are temporary fixed to zero. Although lower average output multipliers are observed in an open economy where some of domestic incomes are spent on imports, the elasticity between output and debt multipliers remains consistent with those observed in Figure .…”
Section: General Equilibrium Analysissupporting
confidence: 85%
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“…Stronger elasticities between debt and output multipliers at the monetary zero lower bound are observed (which is consistent with Erceg and Lindé ; McManus et al. ; who find fiscal free lunches at output multipliers of approximately 2) which is as a result of lower interest rates arising from (for example) expansionary policy, as interest rates are temporary fixed to zero. Although lower average output multipliers are observed in an open economy where some of domestic incomes are spent on imports, the elasticity between output and debt multipliers remains consistent with those observed in Figure .…”
Section: General Equilibrium Analysissupporting
confidence: 85%
“…This intuition does not uniformly follow to tax output multipliers as fiscal expansion at the zero lower bound can have deflationary impacts which can lead to a rising real interest rate; these results are in line with Eggertsson () and McManus et al. ().…”
Section: General Equilibrium Analysissupporting
confidence: 57%
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