Financial Markets and Fiscal Unions

47 Pages Posted: 19 Mar 2017 Last revised: 28 Dec 2025

See all articles by Patrick Kehoe

Patrick Kehoe

Stanford University

Elena Pastorino

University of Minnesota - Minneapolis; Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Date Written: March 2017

Abstract

Do sophisticated international financial markets obviate the need for an active union-wide authority to orchestrate fiscal transfers between countries to provide adequate insurance against country-specific economic fluctuations? We argue that they do. Specifically, we show that in a benchmark economy with no international financial markets, an activist union-wide authority is necessary to achieve desirable outcomes. With sophisticated financial markets, however, such an authority is unnecessary if its only goal is to provide cross-country insurance. Since restricting the set of policy instruments available to member countries does not create a fiscal externality across them, this result holds in a wide variety of settings. Finally, we establish that an activist union-wide authority concerned just with providing insurance across member countries is optimal only when individual countries are either unable or unwilling to pursue desirable policies.

Suggested Citation

Kehoe, Patrick and Pastorino, Elena, Financial Markets and Fiscal Unions (March 2017). NBER Working Paper No. w23235, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2935440

Patrick Kehoe (Contact Author)

Stanford University ( email )

Elena Pastorino

University of Minnesota - Minneapolis ( email )

110 Wulling Hall, 86 Pleasant St, S.E.
308 Harvard Street SE
Minneapolis, MN 55455
United States

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis ( email )

90 Hennepin Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55480
United States

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