The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces

The growth of debt and deficits in developed countries has led many states to consider the adoption of fiscal rules. There is little evidence on the benefits of different types of rules. This study uses Monte Carlo techniques to examine the impact on welfare and government spending stabilization of...

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Main Authors: Landon, Stuart, Smith, Constance
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sites.ualberta.ca/~econwps/2015/wp2015-13.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ris:albaec:2015_013 2023-05-15T17:22:36+02:00 The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces Landon, Stuart Smith, Constance https://sites.ualberta.ca/~econwps/2015/wp2015-13.pdf unknown https://sites.ualberta.ca/~econwps/2015/wp2015-13.pdf preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:31:06Z The growth of debt and deficits in developed countries has led many states to consider the adoption of fiscal rules. There is little evidence on the benefits of different types of rules. This study uses Monte Carlo techniques to examine the impact on welfare and government spending stabilization of five types of government expenditure rules. The simulation employs a three-variable VAR estimated using data for the Canadian provinces. The use of a VAR captures the interactive effects between spending under the fiscal rule, output and revenue. The best fiscal rules reduce government expenditure volatility by about half relative to a balanced budget rule. The stabilization benefit is about twice as great for the three provinces with more resource-based and volatile revenue — Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland. Some fiscal rules lead to an unsustainable path for government debt or assets under many simulations due to an absence of feedback from the stock of debt or assets to current expenditure. We find that a simple rule, where government expenditure is based on the moving average of past government revenue, is one of the better performing rules and yields a level of expenditure stabilization and a welfare gain similar to the more complicated “debt brake” rule adopted by Switzerland and other countries. The Swiss rule requires forecasts for revenue and output, and its greater complexity may make it more difficult to implement, monitor, and communicate to the public. fiscal rules; fiscal policy; stabilization; government spending; Canadian government; economic policy Report Newfoundland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description The growth of debt and deficits in developed countries has led many states to consider the adoption of fiscal rules. There is little evidence on the benefits of different types of rules. This study uses Monte Carlo techniques to examine the impact on welfare and government spending stabilization of five types of government expenditure rules. The simulation employs a three-variable VAR estimated using data for the Canadian provinces. The use of a VAR captures the interactive effects between spending under the fiscal rule, output and revenue. The best fiscal rules reduce government expenditure volatility by about half relative to a balanced budget rule. The stabilization benefit is about twice as great for the three provinces with more resource-based and volatile revenue — Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland. Some fiscal rules lead to an unsustainable path for government debt or assets under many simulations due to an absence of feedback from the stock of debt or assets to current expenditure. We find that a simple rule, where government expenditure is based on the moving average of past government revenue, is one of the better performing rules and yields a level of expenditure stabilization and a welfare gain similar to the more complicated “debt brake” rule adopted by Switzerland and other countries. The Swiss rule requires forecasts for revenue and output, and its greater complexity may make it more difficult to implement, monitor, and communicate to the public. fiscal rules; fiscal policy; stabilization; government spending; Canadian government; economic policy
format Report
author Landon, Stuart
Smith, Constance
spellingShingle Landon, Stuart
Smith, Constance
The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces
author_facet Landon, Stuart
Smith, Constance
author_sort Landon, Stuart
title The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces
title_short The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces
title_full The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces
title_fullStr The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces
title_full_unstemmed The Welfare and Stabilization Benefits of Fiscal Rules: Evidence from Canadian Provinces
title_sort welfare and stabilization benefits of fiscal rules: evidence from canadian provinces
url https://sites.ualberta.ca/~econwps/2015/wp2015-13.pdf
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation https://sites.ualberta.ca/~econwps/2015/wp2015-13.pdf
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