
handle: 10230/28046 , 10419/208243 , 10419/197885 , 1814/44979
AbstractThis paper finds that debt-financed fiscal multipliers vary depending on the location of the debt buyer. In a sample of 33 countries fiscal multipliers are larger when government purchases are financed by issuing debt to foreign investors (non-residents), compared to when they are financed by issuing debt to home investors (residents). In a theoretical model, the location of the government creditor produces these differential responses through the extent that private investment is crowded out. International capital mobility of the resident private sector decreases the difference between the two types of financing both in the model and in the data.
structural vector autoregressions, Economic models, Debt management, small open-economy model, E2, investment crowding in, sign restrictions, debt financing, Magnitude restrictions, Small open economy, proxy-SVAR, Fiscal multipliers, ddc:330, Government spending, G15, International financial markets, Structural vector autoregressions, H3, H6, E62, F41, Debt financing, Fiscal policy
structural vector autoregressions, Economic models, Debt management, small open-economy model, E2, investment crowding in, sign restrictions, debt financing, Magnitude restrictions, Small open economy, proxy-SVAR, Fiscal multipliers, ddc:330, Government spending, G15, International financial markets, Structural vector autoregressions, H3, H6, E62, F41, Debt financing, Fiscal policy
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