Monetary and fiscal policy interactions in the post-war U.S. |
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Authors: | Nora Traum Shu-Chun S. Yang |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Economics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, United States;bResearch Department, the International Monetary Fund, Washington, D.C. 20431, United States |
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Abstract: | A New Keynesian model allowing for an active monetary and passive fiscal policy (AMPF) regime and a passive monetary and active fiscal policy (PMAF) regime is estimated to fit various U.S. samples from 1955 to 2007. The results show that data in the pre-Volcker periods strongly prefer an AMPF regime, even with a prior centered in the PMAF region. The estimation, however, is not very informative about whether the Federal Reserve's reaction to inflation is greater than one in the pre-Volcker period, because much lower values can still preserve determinacy under passive fiscal policy. In addition, whether a PMAF regime can generate consumption growth following a government spending increase depends on the degree of price stickiness. An income tax cut can yield an unusual negative labor response if monetary policy aggressively stabilizes output growth. |
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Keywords: | Fiscal and monetary policy interactions New Keynesian models Bayesian estimation |
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