The Effect of Public Spending on Consumption: Reconciling Theory and Evidence


Autoria(s): Ambler, Steve; Bouakez, Hafedh; Cardia, Emanuela
Data(s)

24/09/2008

24/09/2008

01/09/2008

Resumo

Recent empirical evidence from vector autoregressions (VARs) suggests that public spending shocks increase (crowd in) private consumption. Standard general equilibrium models predict the opposite. We show that a standard real business cycle (RBC) model in which public spending is chosen optimally can rationalize the crowding-in effect documented in the VAR literature. When such a model is used as a data-generating process, a VAR estimated using the artificial data yields a positive consumption response to an increase in public spending, consistent with the empirical findings. This result holds regardless of whether private and public purchases are complements or substitutes.

Formato

439053 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/2579

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Université de Montréal - Département de sciences économiques

Relação

Cahier de recherche #2008-11

Palavras-Chave #Optimal public spending #Business cycles #Crowding in #E2 #E3 #H3
Tipo

Article