Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory

We examine the long-run impact of fiscal policy on economic growth under the conditions of an economic and monetary union (EMU). The analysis is based on the neoclassical growth model of a small (in economic terms) open economy in an EMU. The core assumptions are perfect capital mobility, which resu...

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Main Author: Michał Konopczyński
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Finance and Management, Warsaw; Vistula University 2013-10-01
Series:Contemporary Economics
Online Access:http://ce.vizja.pl/en/download-pdf/id/287
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spelling doaj-ff29ea35205647939ceb9d5bc3cc6f972020-11-24T23:09:01ZengUniversity of Finance and Management, Warsaw; Vistula UniversityContemporary Economics2084-08452013-10-0173112410.5709/ce.1897-9254.86Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theoryMichał KonopczyńskiWe examine the long-run impact of fiscal policy on economic growth under the conditions of an economic and monetary union (EMU). The analysis is based on the neoclassical growth model of a small (in economic terms) open economy in an EMU. The core assumptions are perfect capital mobility, which results in identical interest rates across the EMU, and perfect mobility of goods, which leads to the convergence of price levels. The model is based on standard neoclassical assumptions, i.e., the output is determined by the Cobb-Douglas production function with a Harrod-neutral technical progress and constant returns to scale, capital and labor receive their marginal products, etc. We show that a unique long-run equilibrium exists and is characterized by the so-called natural rate of growth. The necessary and sufficient conditions of global asymptotic stability form a system of three non-trivial inequalities. We argue that in modern economies, these conditions are satisfied, except perhaps for very short periods of time. Furthermore, we show that the golden rules of fiscal policy have the form of an alternative optimal policy that crucially depends on the relation between the real interest rate and the natural rate of growth and on the relations between five other autonomous parameters.http://ce.vizja.pl/en/download-pdf/id/287
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michał Konopczyński
spellingShingle Michał Konopczyński
Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
Contemporary Economics
author_facet Michał Konopczyński
author_sort Michał Konopczyński
title Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
title_short Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
title_full Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
title_fullStr Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
title_full_unstemmed Fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
title_sort fiscal policy within a common currency area – growth implications in the light of neoclassical theory
publisher University of Finance and Management, Warsaw; Vistula University
series Contemporary Economics
issn 2084-0845
publishDate 2013-10-01
description We examine the long-run impact of fiscal policy on economic growth under the conditions of an economic and monetary union (EMU). The analysis is based on the neoclassical growth model of a small (in economic terms) open economy in an EMU. The core assumptions are perfect capital mobility, which results in identical interest rates across the EMU, and perfect mobility of goods, which leads to the convergence of price levels. The model is based on standard neoclassical assumptions, i.e., the output is determined by the Cobb-Douglas production function with a Harrod-neutral technical progress and constant returns to scale, capital and labor receive their marginal products, etc. We show that a unique long-run equilibrium exists and is characterized by the so-called natural rate of growth. The necessary and sufficient conditions of global asymptotic stability form a system of three non-trivial inequalities. We argue that in modern economies, these conditions are satisfied, except perhaps for very short periods of time. Furthermore, we show that the golden rules of fiscal policy have the form of an alternative optimal policy that crucially depends on the relation between the real interest rate and the natural rate of growth and on the relations between five other autonomous parameters.
url http://ce.vizja.pl/en/download-pdf/id/287
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