1 / 23

ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES BUCHAREST DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE - BANKING DISSERTATION PAPER

ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES BUCHAREST DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE - BANKING DISSERTATION PAPER The Effects of Government Spending on Economic Growth Supervisor: Professor MOISA ALTAR MCs Student: STOIAN ANDREEA - MARIA June 2002. 1. Empirical Evidence 2.Theoretical Background

weaverc
Download Presentation

ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES BUCHAREST DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE - BANKING DISSERTATION PAPER

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES BUCHAREST DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE - BANKING DISSERTATION PAPER The Effects of Government Spending on Economic Growth Supervisor: Professor MOISA ALTAR MCs Student: STOIAN ANDREEA - MARIA June 2002

  2. 1. Empirical Evidence 2.Theoretical Background 3. Data and Methodology 4. Estimation Results 5.Conclusions

  3. 1. Empirical Evidence exogenous growth endogenous growth government spending as flow (Ram, Barro, Engen & Skinner, Heitger) public capital hypothesis (Aschauer, Batina, Pereira) financing government spending (Devereux & Love)

  4. Ram (1986) cross-section 115 countries, 1960-1980 (Summers-Heston database) 1960-1970, 1970-1980 LDC individual regression (20 observations) Findings: positive relationship government played an important role during major shocks 70/115, positive relationship 1 case, negative relationship

  5. Barro (1989) endogenous growth government spending flow cross -section, 72 countries,1960-1985 (Summers-Heston database) excepting major oil-exporting countries Findings: positive relationship: social transfers, government spending on infrastructure negative relationship: public consumption spending not significant relationship: national defense, education inverse causality (Wagner’s Law): social transfers (+), education (+), public consumption government spending (-)

  6. Engen and Skinner (1992) taxation and government spending 107 countries, 1970-1985 (Summers-Heston database) negative relationship government spending - economic growth Heitger (2001) neoclassical model 21 OECD countries, 1960-2000 public consumption, transfers (interest payments, subsidies), public investment negative relationship: economic growth, investment not-significant human capital

  7. Aschauer (2001) public capital hypothesis ”core” public goods vs. “others” 48 american states, 1970-1990 positive relationship more significance for “others” Pereira (2001) public capital hypothesis 12 OECD countries VAR/VECM cointegration: Belgium, Canada, Germany, Sweden no-cointegration: 8 24-34 observations

  8. Aschauer (2001) initial investments: bond issue maintenance of capital: taxes negative relationship Devereux & Love (1995) government spending financed by taxes temporary or permanent shock: decreasing growth rate

  9. 2.Theoretical Background Ihori & Kondo, 2001

  10. 3.Data and Methodology

  11. 4.Estimation Results 1st Step: simple OLS 2nd Step: “exogeneity” (Edelberg, Eichenbaum & Fisher, 1998) 3rd Step: VECM

  12. DHUMAN=f(DHUMAN(-1),DHUMAN(-2),DCONSUM,DCONSUM(-1),DINVEST,DINCOME,SEAS)+εtDHUMAN=f(DHUMAN(-1),DHUMAN(-2),DCONSUM,DCONSUM(-1),DINVEST,DINCOME,SEAS)+εt

  13. DINVEST=f(DINVEST(-1),DINVEST(-2),DCONSUM,DCONSUM(-1),DCONSUM(-2),SEAS)+εtDINVEST=f(DINVEST(-1),DINVEST(-2),DCONSUM,DCONSUM(-1),DCONSUM(-2),SEAS)+εt

  14. 5.Conclusions industrial production reacts on shocks on human capital government spending industrial output reacts on shocks on government spending on investments the effects of HCGS are more significant than those of GSI long-run equilibrium relationship GSC, GSI negative effects on industrial production HCGS positive effects on industrial production industrial production human capital intensive

  15. Shortcomings: cross-section analysis (not my favourite) monthly data ”exogeneity” of government spending on consumption first-difference stationarity: coefficients from OLS financing government spending

  16. References • Aschauer, D.A. (2001), "Output and Employment Effects of Public Capital",Public Finance & Management,1,2, pp.135-160 • Barro, R.J. (1988a), "Government Spending in a Simple Model of Endogenous Growth",NBER Working Paper Series • (1989b), "A Coss - Countru Study of Growth, Saving and Government",NBER Working Paper Series • Barro, R.J. and X. Sala-I-Martin (1995), "Economic Growth",The MIT Press, pp.152-161,330-462 • Batina, R.G. (2001), "The Effects of Public Capital on the Economy", Public Finance & Management,1,2, pp.113-134 • Brock W.A. and S.N.Durlauf, "Growth Economics and Reality", NBER Working Paper Series • Carr, J.L. (1989), "Government Size and Economic Growth: A New Framework and Some Evidence from Cross-Section and Time Series Data: Comment", American Economic Review, 79, pp.267-271 • Cullis, J. and P.Jones (1998), "Public Finance and Public Choice", Oxford University Press, Oxford, 352-371 • Devereux, M.B. and D.R.F.Love (1995), "The Dymanic Effects of Government Spending Policies in a Two - Sector Endogenous Growth Model", Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 27, pp.232-256 • Edelberg W., M.Eichenbaum and J.D.M.Fisher (1998), "Understanding the Effects of a Shock to Government Purchases", NBER Working Series • Enders W., "Applied Econometric Time Series", John Wiley & Sons, INC • Engen E.M. and J.Skinner (1992), "Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth", NBER Working Paper Series • Fölster S. and M.Henrekson, (1998a),"Growth and Public Sector: A Critique of the Critics", WOPEC Working Paper Series • (2000b), "Growth Effects of Government Expenditure and Taxation in Rich Countries", WOPEC Working Paper Series • Greene W.H. (2000), "Econometric Analysis", Prentice Hall International, Inc • Hamilton J.D. (1994), "Time Series Analysis", Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey • Heitger B. (2001), "The Scope of Government and Its Impact on Economic Growth in OECD Countries", WOPEC Working Paper Series • Ihori T. and H.Kondo (2001), "The Efficiency of Disaggregate Public Capital Provision in Japan", Public Finance & Management, 1,2, pp.161-182 • Palivos T. and C.K.Zip, "Government Expenditure Financing in an Endogenous Growth Model: A Comparison", Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 27, pp.1159-1178 • Pereira A.M. (2001), "Public Investment and Private Sector Performance - International Evidence", Public Finance & Management, 1,2, pp.261-277 • Ram R. (1986), "Government Size and Economic Growth: A New Framework and Some Evidence from Cross-Section and Time Series Data", American Economic Review, 76, pp.291-203 • Rubio -Oscar B. (2000), "A Further Generalization of the Solow Growth Model: The Role of the Public Sector", Economics Letters, 68, pp.79-84 • National Bank of Romania, "Monthly Report", 1999-2001 • National Bank of Romania, "Annual Report", 1991-2001

More Related