Fiscal Stimulus: A Neoclassical Perspective

Posted: 31 Aug 2009

See all articles by Holger Strulik

Holger Strulik

University of Göttingen - School of Law, Economics, Social Sciences

Date Written: August 31, 2009

Abstract

Can a large-scale deficit spending program speed up recovery after recession? To answer that question we calibrate a standard neoclassical growth model with US data and assume that an exogenous shock has driven aggregate output far below steady-state level. We calibrate the model such that a permanent increase of government expenditure is effective in raising output. We then show that 'fiscal stimulus,' i.e. a temporary increase of government expenditure is not only ineffective but detrimental. Even before the spending program expires, aggregate output is lower than it could be without fiscal stimulus. We show the generality of this result w.r.t. size and persistence of the shock, size of the government spending multiplier, and the scale and duration of the stimulus program. Using a phase diagram we provide the economic intuition for our unpleasant finding and explain why, generally, private capital stock reaches its lowest level when a deficit spending program expires. We also show how an accompanying temporary cut of capital income taxes helps to prevent the negative repercussion of deficit spending on economic recovery.

Keywords: defiit spending, government spending multiplier, economic recovery, economic growth.

JEL Classification: E60, H30, H50, O40

Suggested Citation

Strulik, Holger, Fiscal Stimulus: A Neoclassical Perspective (August 31, 2009). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1464859

Holger Strulik (Contact Author)

University of Göttingen - School of Law, Economics, Social Sciences ( email )

Germany

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
526
PlumX Metrics