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Research Working Paper |
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Monetary-Fiscal Policy Interactions and Fiscal Stimulus By Troy Davig and Eric M. Leeper
RWP 09-12 Abstract
Increases in government spending trigger substitution effects―both
inter- and intra-temporal―and a wealth effect. The ultimate impacts on
the economy hinge on current and expected monetary and fiscal policy
behavior. Studies that impose active monetary policy and passive fiscal
policy typically find that government consumption crowds out private
consumption: higher future taxes create a strong negative wealth effect,
while the active monetary response increases the real interest rate.
This paper estimates Markov-switching policy rules for the United States
and finds that monetary and fiscal policies fluctuate between active and
passive behavior. When the estimated joint policy process is imposed on
a conventional new Keynesian model, government spending generates
positive consumption multipliers in some policy regimes and in simulated
data in which all policy regimes are realized. The paper reports the
model's predictions of the macroeconomic impacts of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act's implied path for government spending
under alternative monetary-fiscal policy combinations. |