The Fiscal Stimulus of 2009-10: Trade Openness, Fiscal Space and Exchange Rate Adjustment

47 Pages Posted: 21 Sep 2011 Last revised: 14 Aug 2024

See all articles by Joshua Aizenman

Joshua Aizenman

University of Southern California - Department of Economics

Yothin Jinjarak

Victoria University of Wellington - Te Herenga Waka - School of Economics & Finance

Date Written: September 2011

Abstract

This paper studies the cross-country variation of the fiscal stimulus and the exchange rate adjustment propagated by the global crisis of 2008-9, identifying the role of economic structure in accounting for the heterogeneity of response. We find that greater de facto fiscal space prior to the global crisis and lower trade openness were associated with a higher fiscal stimulus/GDP during 2009-2010 (where the de facto fiscal space is the inverse of the average tax-years it would take to repay the public debt). Lowering the 2006 public debt/average tax base from the level of low-income countries (5.94) down to the average level of the Euro minus the Euro-area peripheral countries (1.97), was associated with a larger crisis stimulus in 2009-11 of 2.78 GDP percentage points. Joint estimation of fiscal stimuli and exchange rate depreciations indicates that higher trade openness was associated with a smaller fiscal stimulus and a higher depreciation rate during the crisis. Overall, the results are in line with the predictions of the neo-Keynesian open-economy model.

Suggested Citation

Aizenman, Joshua and Jinjarak, Yothin, The Fiscal Stimulus of 2009-10: Trade Openness, Fiscal Space and Exchange Rate Adjustment (September 2011). NBER Working Paper No. w17427, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1931199

Joshua Aizenman (Contact Author)

University of Southern California - Department of Economics ( email )

3620 South Vermont Ave. Kaprielian (KAP) Hall 300
Los Angeles, CA 90089
United States

Yothin Jinjarak

Victoria University of Wellington - Te Herenga Waka - School of Economics & Finance ( email )

P.O. Box 600
Wellington 6001
New Zealand

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

Paper statistics

Downloads
60
Abstract Views
1,393
Rank
704,427
PlumX Metrics