The Fiscal Consequences of Deflation: Evidence from the Golden Age of Globalization
JOURNAL
Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance
YEAR
Jun 4, 2019
TYPE
Articles in journals
AUTHORS
Jalles, J., Afonso, A
VOL Nº
74
PAGES
129-147
ABSTRACT
We study the fiscal consequences of deflation on a panel of 17 economies in the first wave of globalization, between 1870 and 1914. By means of impulse response analyses and panel regressions, we find that a 1% fall in the price level is associated with an increase in the public debt ratio of about 0.23–0.33 percentage points and accounting for trade openness, monetary policy and the exchange rate raises the absolute value of the coefficient on deflation. For government revenue, lagged deflation comes out with a statistically significant negative coefficient, while government primary expenditure seems relatively invariant to changes in prices. Moreover, a 1% decrease in the price level is associated with a rise in the revenue to GDP ratio of about 0.02 percentage points, a reverse Olivera-Tanzi effect.
JEL CLASS
C33;E31;E50;E62
KEYWORDS
Debt;Inflation; Local projection;Impulse response functions; GMM; Cross-sectional dependencies; Business cycle