The Short-Run Macroeconomics of Aid Inflows: Understanding the Interaction of Fiscal and Reserve Policy
47 Pages Posted: 22 Mar 2010
Date Written: March 2010
Abstract
We develop a tractable open-economy new-Keynesian model with two sectors to analyze the short-term effects of aid-financed fiscal expansions. We distinguish between spending the aid, which is under the control of the fiscal authorities, and absorbing the aid-using the aid to finance a higher current account deficit-which is influenced by the central bank's reserves policy when access to international capital markets is limited. The standard treatment of the transfer problem implicitly assumes spending equals absorption. Here, in contrast, a policy mix that results in spending but not absorbing the aid generates demand pressures and results in an increase in real interest rates. It can also lead to a temporary real depreciation if demand pressures are strong enough to threaten external balance. Certain features of low income countries, such as limited participation in domestic financial markets, make a real depreciation more likely by amplifying demand pressures when aid is spent but not absorbed. The results from our model can help understand the recent experience of Uganda, which saw an increase in government spending following a surge in aid yet experienced a real depreciation and an increase in real interest rates.
Keywords: Africa, Aid flows, Capital inflows, Central bank policy, Economic models, Fiscal policy, Government expenditures, Interest rate increases, Low-income developing countries, Monetary policy, Real effective exchange rates, Reserves, Uganda
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Sovereign Borrowing Cost and the Imf's Data Standards Initiatives
By John Cady and Anthony J. Pellechio
-
By Andrew Berg, Rafael Portillo, ...
-
A Model for Full-Fledged Inflation Targeting and Application to Ghana
By Ali Alichi, Kevin Clinton, ...
-
The Imf's Reserves Template and Nominal Exchange Rate Volatility
By John Cady and Jesus Gonzalez-garcia
-
The Role of Risk and Information for International Capital Flows: New Evidence from the SDDS
-
The Role of Risk and Information for International Capital Flows: New Evidence from the SDDS