Book/Printed Material What has financed government debt?
About this Item
Title
- What has financed government debt?
Summary
- "Equilibrium models imply that the real value of debt in the hands of the public must equal the expected present-value of surpluses. Empirical models of fiscal policy typically do not impose this condition and often do not even include debt. Absence of debt from empirical models can produce non-invertible representations, obscuring the true present-value relation, even if it holds in the data. First, we show that small VAR models of fiscal policy may not be invertible and that expanding the information set to include government debt has quantitatively important implications. Then we impose the present-value condition on an identified VAR and characterize the way in which the present-value support of debt varies across types of fiscal shocks. The role of expected primary surpluses in supporting innovations to debt depends on the nature of the shock. Debt is supported almost entirely by changes in the present-value of surpluses for some fiscal shocks, but for other fiscal shocks surpluses fail to adjust, leaving a large role for expected changes in discount rates. Horizons over which debt innovations are financed are long---on the order of 50 years or more"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Names
- Chung, Hess
- Leeper, Eric Michael
- National Bureau of Economic Research
Created / Published
- Cambridge, MA : National Bureau of Economic Research, c2007.
Notes
- - Title from PDF file as viewed on 9/26/2007.
- - Includes bibliographical references.
- - Also available in print.
- - Mode of access: World Wide Web.
- - System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Call Number/Physical Location
- HB1
Digital Id
- https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gdc/gdcebookspublic.2007616591
- http://papers.nber.org/papers/w13425 External
Library of Congress Control Number
- 2007616591
Access Advisory
- Unrestricted online access
Online Format
- image