Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T21:46:20.706Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fiscal sustainability and public debt in an endogenous growth model*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2008

JESÚS FERNÁNDEZ-HUERTAS MORAGA
Affiliation:
IAE-CSIC and IZA
JEAN-PIERRE VIDAL
Affiliation:
European Central Bank

Abstract

This paper investigates fiscal sustainability in an overlapping generations economy with endogenous growth coming from human capital formation through educational spending. We assess how budgetary imbalances affect economic dynamics and the outlook for economic growth, thereby providing a rationale for fiscal rules ensuring sustainability. Our results show that the appropriate response of fiscal policy to temporary shocks is not trivial in the absence of fiscal rules. Fiscal rules allow for a timely reaction, thereby avoiding possibly disruptive fiscal adjustment in the future: the more adjustment is delayed, the larger its necessary scale is. We perform a rough calibration of the model to simulate the effects of a demographic shock (change in the population growth rate) under different fiscal policy scenarios.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alesina, A. and Perotti, R. (1995) The political economy of budget deficits. IMF Staff Papers, 42, 1, 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allais, M. (1947) Economie et intérêt. Imprimerie Nationale, Paris.Google Scholar
Annicchiarico, B. and Giammarioli, N. (2004) Fiscal rules and sustainability of public finances in an endogenous growth model. European Central Bank Working Paper No. 381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buiter, W. H. (2003) Ten commandments for a fiscal rule in the E(M)U. Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 19(1): 8499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cass, David (1965) Optimum growth in an aggregative model of capital accumulation. The Review of Economic Studies, 32(3): 233240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De la Croix, D. and Michel, P. (2002) A Theory of Economic Growth – Dynamics and Policy in Overlapping Generations. Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De la Croix, D. and Doepke, M. (2003) Inequality and growth: why differential fertility matters. American Economic Review, 93: 10911113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De la Croix, D. and Doepke, M. (2004) Public versus private education when differential fertility matters. Journal of Development Economics, 73: 607629.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diamond, P. A. (1965) National debt in a neoclassical growth model. American Economic Review, 55: 11261150.Google Scholar
EUROSTAT (2002) EUROSTAT Yearbook 2002: The Statistical Guide to Europe, Data 1990–2000. Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, Luxembourg.Google Scholar
Fernández-Huertas, Moraga Jesús and Vidal, Jean-Pierre (2004) Fiscal Sustainability and Public Debt in an Endogenous Growth Model. European Central Bank Working Paper No. 395.Google Scholar
Glomm, G. and Ravikumar, B. (1992) Public versus private investment in human capital endogenous growth and income inequality. Journal of Political Economy, 100: 818834.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Joumard, I. (2002) Tax Systems in European Union Countries. OECD Economic Studies No. 34.Google Scholar
Kamps, C. (2004) The Dynamic Macroeconomic Effects of Public Capital: Theory and Evidence for OECD Countries. Berlin: Springer.Google Scholar
Lambrecht, S., Michel, P., and Thibault, E. (2000) Intertemporal equilibrium with myopic altruism. Document de Travail No. 00A24. GREQAM.Google Scholar
Lambrecht, S., Michel, P., and Vidal, J.-P. (2005) Public pensions and growth. European Economic Review, 49: 12611281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mankiw, N. G., Romer, D., and Weil, D. N. (1992) A contribution to the empirics of economic growth. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 107(2): pp. 407437.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marín, J. (2002) Sustainability of Public Finances and Automatic Stabilization under a Rule of Budgetary Discipline. European Central Bank Working Paper No. 193.Google Scholar
Martinez-Mongay, C. (2000) ECFIN's Effective Tax Rates. Properties and Comparisons with other Tax Indicators. European Commission's Economic Papers No. 146.Google Scholar
Mendoza, E. G., Razin, A., and Tesar, L. L. (1994) Effective tax rates in macroeconomics, cross-country estimates of tax rates on factor incomes and consumption. Journal of Monetary Economics, 34: 297323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Michel, P., Thibault, E., and Vidal, J.-P. (2006) Intergenerational altruism and neoclassical growth models. In Kolm, S.-C. and Mercier Ythier, J. (eds) Handbook on the Economics of Giving: Altruism and Reciprocity, Vol. 2. Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp. 10551106.Google Scholar
Milesi-Ferretti, G. M. (2004) Good, bad or ugly? On the effects of fiscal rules with creative accounting. Journal of Public Economics, 88(1–2): 377394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
OECD (2007) Economic Outlook, 2(82).Google Scholar
Rankin, N. and Roffia, B. (2003) Maximum sustainable government Debt in the overlapping generations model. The Manchester School, 71(3): 217241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samuelson, P. A. (1958) An exact consumption loan model of Interest with or without the social contrivance of money. Journal of Political Economy, 66: 467482.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schmitt-Grohe, S. and Uribe, M. (2004) Optimal Simple and Implementable Monetary and Fiscal Rules. NBER Working Paper 10253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar