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The Macroeconomics of Public Expenditures

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Title: The Macroeconomics of Public Expenditures


1
The Macroeconomics of Public Expenditures
  • Vandana Chandra, PRMEP
  • PEAM Core Course
  • January 12, 2004

2
Key Concepts
  • Fiscal policy and growth the connections,
    complications and trade-offs
  • Macroeconomic balances
  • Debt sustainability

3
Fiscal policy and growth
  • Optimal fiscal policy is one that supports
    national objectives growth and poverty
    reduction efficiently in a sustainable manner
  • Components of fiscal policy
  • Revenues tax, fees, foreign transfers (and
    grants)
  • Public expenditures (PE) recurrent (public
    consumption) and capital (public investment)
  • Revenues public consumption public investment
  • government budget deficit before grants
  • Optimal level of fiscal components depend upon
    (1) country-specific circumstances (high or low
    income), (2) debt situation, (3)fiscal
    institutions, (4) governance, (5) capacity in
    government and private sector etc..

4
Fiscal policy growth contd.2
  • Links between fiscal adjustment and growth depend
    upon the type of economy
  • Fiscal policy strengthens macroeconomic stability
    which enables investment and growth
  • Fiscal incentives through taxes, subsidies and PE
    provide incentives for private sector growth
    especially through lower interest rates,
    provision of public goods, and service delivery
  • Fiscal adjustment increases total factor
    productivity of labor and capital economy-wide
  • In most developing countries, the level of PE are
    constrained by (a) available revenues (b)
    grants (c) level of fiscal deficit and its
    longer term sustainability. (b) is given and (a)
    is limited, especially if GNP growth is low.

5
Fiscal policy growth contd.3
  • Debt sustainability and size of total debt matter
    case by case basis
  • If high and unsustainable debt, cannot use GBD to
    finance higher PE and growth without jeopardizing
    macro stability
  • If low debt, can use higher PE, especially public
    investment provided concessional financing is
    available, to increase growth. Case by case
    approach is needed.
  • Fiscal policy has to be tailored to country
    specific conditions to foster growth, I.e., a
    uniform approach to FP in which all countries are
    counseled to reduce their deficits under all
    circumstances is not appropriate. Baldacci,
    Clements and Gupta,Finance and Development,
    December 2003.

6
Fiscal spending, trade-offs and growth
  • The achievement of sustainable growth and poverty
    reduction is a complex process and determined by
    the pattern of growth desired and achieved
  • Ceteris paribus, PE for sustainable growth
    presents various trade-offs
  • Aggregate levels of public consumption and public
    investment
  • Inter-sectoral public investment e.g.
    investment in human vs physical capital rural vs
    urban water vs roads
  • Between categories of public consumption wages
    vs maintenance expenditures vs subsidies and
    transfers

7
Macroeconomic effects of fiscal deficits -
based on Stanley Fischer and William Easterly,
1990
8
Economics of the government budget constraint
(GBC)
  • Fiscal policy in an open and globally integrated
    economy
  • The national income identity effects of the
    fiscal deficit on domestic savings, investment,
    current account and growth
  • Financing of the fiscal deficit and the
    implications for macro stability
  • Debt dynamics issues of fiscal sustainability
    and solvency and long run constraints on fiscal
    policy

9
Fiscal policy in an open economy
  • GNP Y C I (T G) X M
  • - I (Y C) ( M X) (T G )
  • Private investment deficit (PID) Current
    Account deficit Government budget deficit (GBD)
  • Keynesian idea to use fiscal spending to raise
    GNP during a recession counter-cyclical
  • If perfect international capital mobility, then
    only tool is fiscal policy
  • If imperfect, then both fiscal and monetary
    policy (limited) are available tools

10
Government Budget Constraints
  • Govt. budget deficit (GBD) (Private saving
    private investment) (Current account deficit)
  • Link between GBD and CA deficit depends on
    monetary policy and X M elasticity.

11
Financing of the fiscal deficit 4 ways
  • Print money can be inflationary after a point.
    Seignorage1 2.5 of GNP (avg.)
  • Foreign reserve use can lead to an exchange
    rate crisis
  • Foreign borrowing - can lead to a debt crisis if
    resources are not used productively
  • Domestic borrowing can lead to an increase in
    interest rates and dampen private investment
    also a domestic debt crisis
  • All are interlinked and affect the macro
    environment.

12
Debt dynamics for how long can a government run
deficits?
  • ? debt /GNP (prim. deficit/GNP)
    seignorage/GNP real interest rate GNP growth
    ratedebt
  • Sustainability as long as GNP growth gt real
    interest rate (I)
  • If real interest rategtGNP growth, and the prim.
    deficit exceeds the amt. that can be financed by
    seignorage, debt/GNP will continue to rise until
    no one will finance the debt. Deficit will have
    to be cut.

13
Is the deficit sustainable? Needs to be checked
through projections over time
  • Sustainability depends on size and rate of
    economic growth. India, Pakistan, Malaysia ran
    high deficits in 1980-86 (now 11) with single
    digit inflation vs Argentina, Brazil same
    deficits, high inflation because of no growth.
  • Are deficits from high public investment
    sustainable? No, because there is a danger that
    unproductive expenditures will be included.
  • Tax and spending efficiency promotes higher
    deficits through higher growth.

14
BUT sustainability is not equivalent to
optimality
  • Large and continuing deficits crowd out private
    investment and growth
  • Large and continuing deficits can become
    inflationary if the rate of seignorage is raised
    to finance them

15
Debt dynamics.contd.
  • Maximum non-inflationary seignorage possible?
    Usually 1 of GNP but in a rapidly growing and
    financially deep economy, may be 2.5 of GNP.
  • What if real interest rate lt growth rate? Debt is
    eroded over time through growth, so primary
    deficits can be financed in excess of seignorage.
    A type of Ponzi scheme. East Asia.
  • Real interest rates cannot remain below growth
    rates for long. Bond markets push up interest
    rates. Growth declines.
  • What if govt. sets interest rate controls? Savers
    will take their savings out capital flight as
    in LAC.
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