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Wiley InterScience

Economic Policy

Economic Policy

Volume 21 Issue 48, Pages 597 - 638

Published Online: 2 Oct 2006

© 2010 Centre for Economic Policy Research, Center for Economic Studies, Maison des Sciences de l'Homme



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Twin deficits: squaring theory, evidence and common sense
Giancarlo Corsetti 1 and Gernot J. Müller 2
  1 European University Institute, University of Rome III and CEPR;   2 Goethe University Frankfurt
Copyright © CEPR, CES, MSH, 2006

SUMMARY

Abstract1. INTRODUCTION2. A FIRST LOOK AT THE EVIDENCE3. A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON FISCAL POLICY TRANSMISSION IN OPEN ECONOMIES: THE ROLE OF OPENNESS4. TIME SERIES EVIDENCEREFERENCES
 

Budget deficits and current accounts
OPENNESS AND FISCAL PERSISTENCE

Simple accounting suggests that shocks to the government budget move the current account in the same direction, and this 'twin deficits' intuition leads many observers to call for fiscal consolidation in the US as a necessary measure to reduce the large external imbalance of this country. The response of other macroeconomic variables to budget developments, however, has important implications for 'twin deficits' and for this policy prescription. Focusing on the international transmission of fiscal policy shocks via terms of trade changes, we show that the likelihood and magnitude of twin deficits increases with the degree of openness of an economy, and decreases with the persistence of fiscal shocks. We take this insight to the data and investigate the transmission of fiscal shocks in a vector autoregression (VAR) model estimated for Australia, Canada, the UK and the US. We find that in less open countries the external impact of shocks to either government spending or budget deficits is limited, while private investment responds in line with our theoretical prediction. These results suggest that a fiscal retrenchment in the US may have a limited impact on its current external deficit.

— Giancarlo Corsetti and Gernot J. Müller


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1468-0327.2006.00167.x About DOI

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