Séminaire Marleau par Guido Ascari (Dutch National Bank et Université de Pavia) - Government spending and fiscal foresight
28 mars 2025 — 14 h 30 à 16 h 30
La série de conférences permet au Département de science économique de l’Université d’Ottawa d’organiser un symposium sur la politique économique comportant une conférence phare livrée par une figure importante du domaine. Le fonds permet également de financer annuellement l’offre de trois séminaires de recherche. Trois spécialistes de l’économie ou des politiques monétaires seront ainsi invités à venir présenter leurs plus récents résultats aux personnes intéressées, nommément aux membres de la communauté de recherche ainsi qu’aux étudiantes et étudiants des cycles supérieurs. Ce séminaire est le troisième de la série (en Anglais seulement).
Government spending and fiscal foresight
Pour plus d'information par rapport au conferencier Guido Ascari, veuillez consulter son webpage.
Abstract
The talk will focus on the effects of government spending and whether they depend on expectations of future taxes, a central tenet of the fiscal theory of the price level.
Employing two different effective measures of future tax expectations in a local projection analysis on post-war U.S. data reveals that the effects of an anticipated government spending shock depend solely on expectations about future taxes. In contrast, tax foresight does not affect the transmission of unanticipated shocks. When agents expect taxes to rise (fall), the economy response to an anticipated government spending shock aligns with a monetary (fiscal) regime. Hence, tax foresight is a sufficient statistic to identify the effects of anticipated government spending shocks. We argue that this is consistent with recent literature on monetary and fiscal policy interaction.
Moreover, we investigate which specific spending categories of the U.S. Federal Budget generate the largest non-Ricardian effects, characterized by strong inflationary pressures. Changes in discretionary spending, particularly in National Defense, exhibit pronounced non-Ricardian effects primarily during periods when funding for this category is rapidly diminishing or scarce. Limited funding for military expenditures undermines the credibility of fiscal support, leading to inflation. Variations in mandatory spending, especially Medicare and Medicaid, typically lead to Ricardian effects on output and inflation, regardless of the financing strain for this category. Social Security spending tends to produce more substantial inflationary effects when resources for expanding this type of spending are abundant.