Policy Effects in the Post Boom U.S. Economy
36 Pages Posted: 20 Jan 2005
Date Written: January 2005
Abstract
The paper analyzes the question why the U.S. economy in the 2000:4-2004:3 period was sluggish in light of the large expansionary fiscal and monetary policies that took place. The answer does not appear to be that there were large structural changes in the economy or systematic bad shocks. This paper tests for such changes and shocks, and the results are generally negative. Instead, the main culprits seem to be large negative effects from declines in the stock market and exports. Although not tested in this paper, some of the decline in exports may be the result of the stock market decline, in which case most of the explanation is simply the stock market decline itself.
Keywords: fiscal policy, monetary policy
JEL Classification: E00
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Testing for a New Economy in the 1990s
By Ray C. Fair
-
Agency Costs, Charitable Trusts, and Corporate Control: Evidence from Hershey's Kiss-Off
By Jonathan Klick and Robert H. Sitkoff
-
Coups, Corporations, and Classified Information
By Arindrajit Dube, Ethan Kaplan, ...
-
Valid Inference in Single-Firm, Single-Event Studies
By Jonah B. Gelbach, Eric Helland, ...
-
Adaptive Pointwise Estimation in Time-Inhomogeneous Time-Series Models
By Pavel Cizek, Wolfgang Karl Härdle, ...
-
Risk Aversion and Stock Prices
By Ray C. Fair