Rising Government Debt and What to Do About It — by Pierre Yared
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Rising Government Debt and What to Do About It
NBER Working Paper No. 24979
Issued in August 2018
NBER Program(s):Economic Fluctuations and Growth, Public Economics, Political Economy
Over the past four decades, government debt as a fraction of GDP has been on an upward trajectory in advanced economies, approaching levels not reached since World War II. While normative macroeconomic theories can explain the increase in the level of debt in certain periods as a response to macroeconomic shocks, they cannot explain the broad-based long-run trend in debt accumulation. In contrast, political economy theories can explain the long-run trend as resulting from an aging population, rising political polarization, and rising electoral uncertainty across advanced economies. These theories emphasize the time-inconsistency in government policymaking, and thus the need for fiscal rules that restrict policymakers. Fiscal rules trade off commitment to not overspend and flexibility to react to shocks. This tradeoff guides design features of optimal rules, such as information dependence, enforcement, cross-country coordination, escape clauses, and instrument vs. target criteria.
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Document Object Identifier (DOI): 10.3386/w24979
PublishFinancevia National Bureau of Economic Research Working Papers https://ift.tt/1j89DVYSeptember 3, 2018 at 03:32PM https://ift.tt/1aNsfVT https://ift.tt/1j89DVY https://ift.tt/2NILeLO