Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia

This paper analyzes whether fiscal policy in South Asia amplifies or smooths business cycle fluctuations. The paper estimates several econometric models to explore the cyclicality of government spending and tax buoyancy. The findings show that fiscal policy is procyclical in most countries. In South Asia, tax revenue increases less than one to one with gross domestic product, but public spending increases more than proportionally. While changes in tax revenue have no significant impact on economic activity, the government spending multiplier is positive and significant: an additional 1 USD of spending leads to an immediate increase in gross domestic product of 0.3 USD and a cumulative increase of 0.6 USD. The impact of public spending on economic activity is entirely due to capital expenditure, which is also more procyclical. Procyclical public spending and a positive expenditure multiplier imply that fiscal policy in South Asia amplifies boom-and-bust cycles.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Beyer, Robert C.M., Milivojevic, Lazar
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-03
Subjects:FISCAL POLICY, FISCAL MULTIPLIER, GOVERNMENT SPENDING, PUBLIC EXPENDITURE, TAXATION, TAX BUOYANCY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/711041553536608365/Fiscal-Policy-and-Economic-Activity-in-South-Asia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31451
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spelling dig-okr-10986314512024-10-17T09:28:32Z Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia Beyer, Robert C.M. Milivojevic, Lazar FISCAL POLICY FISCAL MULTIPLIER GOVERNMENT SPENDING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE TAXATION TAX BUOYANCY This paper analyzes whether fiscal policy in South Asia amplifies or smooths business cycle fluctuations. The paper estimates several econometric models to explore the cyclicality of government spending and tax buoyancy. The findings show that fiscal policy is procyclical in most countries. In South Asia, tax revenue increases less than one to one with gross domestic product, but public spending increases more than proportionally. While changes in tax revenue have no significant impact on economic activity, the government spending multiplier is positive and significant: an additional 1 USD of spending leads to an immediate increase in gross domestic product of 0.3 USD and a cumulative increase of 0.6 USD. The impact of public spending on economic activity is entirely due to capital expenditure, which is also more procyclical. Procyclical public spending and a positive expenditure multiplier imply that fiscal policy in South Asia amplifies boom-and-bust cycles. 2019-03-27T15:09:21Z 2019-03-27T15:09:21Z 2019-03 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/711041553536608365/Fiscal-Policy-and-Economic-Activity-in-South-Asia https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31451 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8792 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL MULTIPLIER
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
TAXATION
TAX BUOYANCY
FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL MULTIPLIER
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
TAXATION
TAX BUOYANCY
spellingShingle FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL MULTIPLIER
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
TAXATION
TAX BUOYANCY
FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL MULTIPLIER
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
TAXATION
TAX BUOYANCY
Beyer, Robert C.M.
Milivojevic, Lazar
Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia
description This paper analyzes whether fiscal policy in South Asia amplifies or smooths business cycle fluctuations. The paper estimates several econometric models to explore the cyclicality of government spending and tax buoyancy. The findings show that fiscal policy is procyclical in most countries. In South Asia, tax revenue increases less than one to one with gross domestic product, but public spending increases more than proportionally. While changes in tax revenue have no significant impact on economic activity, the government spending multiplier is positive and significant: an additional 1 USD of spending leads to an immediate increase in gross domestic product of 0.3 USD and a cumulative increase of 0.6 USD. The impact of public spending on economic activity is entirely due to capital expenditure, which is also more procyclical. Procyclical public spending and a positive expenditure multiplier imply that fiscal policy in South Asia amplifies boom-and-bust cycles.
format Working Paper
topic_facet FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL MULTIPLIER
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
TAXATION
TAX BUOYANCY
author Beyer, Robert C.M.
Milivojevic, Lazar
author_facet Beyer, Robert C.M.
Milivojevic, Lazar
author_sort Beyer, Robert C.M.
title Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia
title_short Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia
title_full Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia
title_fullStr Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia
title_full_unstemmed Fiscal Policy and Economic Activity in South Asia
title_sort fiscal policy and economic activity in south asia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-03
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/711041553536608365/Fiscal-Policy-and-Economic-Activity-in-South-Asia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31451
work_keys_str_mv AT beyerrobertcm fiscalpolicyandeconomicactivityinsouthasia
AT milivojeviclazar fiscalpolicyandeconomicactivityinsouthasia
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