0000000000125571

AUTHOR

Carmen Díaz-roldán

showing 7 related works from this author

Deficit sustainability and inflation in EMU: An analysis from the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level

2007

Price determination theory typically focuses on the role of monetary policy, while the role of fiscal policy is usually neglected. From a different point of view, the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level takes into account monetary and fiscal policy interactions and assumes that fiscal policy may determine the price level, even if monetary authorities pursue an inflation targeting strategy. In this paper we try to test empirically whether the time path of the government budget in EMU countries would have affected price level determination. Our results point to the sustainability of fiscal policy in all the EMU countries but Finland, although no firm conclusions can be drawn about the prevalence…

InflationMacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsFiscal imbalanceInflation targetingjel:E62media_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyjel:H62Monetary economicsFiscal Theory of the Price Level monetary and fiscal dominance central bank independence fiscal solvency inflationFiscal unionFiscal policyjel:O52Political Science and International RelationsFiscal theory of the price levelEconomicsPrice levelmedia_commonEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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US deficit sustainability revisited: A multiple structural change approach

2008

In this article we re-examine the long-run sustainability of US budget deficits, using Bai and Perron's multiple structural change approach. While the deficit would have been weakly sustainable over the full sample (1947:1–2005:3), strong sustainability would appear only between January 1982 and February 1996.

Economics and EconometricsStructural changePublic economicsSustainabilityEconomicsFull sampleFiscal policy; Sustainability; US budget de…cit.
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Is the Fisher effect non-linear? some evidence for Spain, 1963–2002

2005

In this paper the role of non-linearities in the relationship between nominal interest rates and inflation is examined, in order to shed some additional light on the mostly unfavourable evidence on the presence of a full Fisher effect. The analysis is applied to the case of Spain for the period 1963–2002, which allows previous results on the subject to be re-examined and extended. The empirical methodology makes use of recent developments on threshold cointegration, so that cointegration between a pair of variables should be expected only once a certain threshold was reached.

Nominal interest rateInflationEconomics and EconometricsNonlinear systemCointegrationOrder (exchange)media_common.quotation_subjectEconometricsEconomicsFisher hypothesisInternational Fisher effectFinancemedia_commonApplied Financial Economics
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Is the budget deficit sustainable when fiscal policy is non-linear? The case of Spain

2006

In this paper, we re-examine the long-run sustainability of budget deficits, when fiscal policy is conducted as a non-linear process. Our empirical methodology makes use of recent developments on threshold cointegration that consider the possibility of a non-linear relationship between government expenditures and revenues. The analysis is applied to the case of Spain, a country that has recently accomplished an important fiscal consolidation. Overall, our results suggest the presence of significant non-linear effects in Spanish fiscal policy, so that fiscal authorities would cut deficits only if they are ‘large’, which would assure in turn their long-run sustainability.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsFiscal imbalanceDeficit spendingCointegrationSustainabilityEconomicsRevenueFiscal federalismFiscal unionFiscal policyJournal of Macroeconomics
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Change of regime and Phillips curve stability: The case of Spain, 1964–2002

2007

Following the emergence of the Lucas critique, traditional Phillips curves relating inflation to a measure of the level of activity, and augmented to include past inflation (assumed to proxy expected inflation), have been deemed to be highly unstable over time. In this paper we try to investigate, using recent econometric developments, whether such a statement can be supported over a long time period. In the empirical application, we analyze the case of Spain along the period 1964–2002.

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectKeynesian economicsEconomicsProxy (statistics)Phillips curveStability (probability)Lucas critiquemedia_commonJournal of Policy Modeling
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Deficit sustainability, and monetary versus fiscal dominance: The case of Spain, 1850–2000

2014

Abstract In this paper, we provide a test of the sustainability of the Spanish government deficit over the period 1850–2000, emphasizing the role played by monetary and fiscal dominance in order to get fiscal solvency. Since the condition of fiscal solvency was satisfied, government deficit would have been sustainable along the sample period. In addition, the whole period can be characterized as one of fiscal dominance.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsFiscal imbalanceSolvencyDominance (economics)SustainabilityFiscal theory of the price levelEconomicsFiscal federalismMonetary economicsFiscal unionFiscal policyJournal of Policy Modeling
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Searching for Threshold Effects in the Evolution of Budget Deficits: An Application to the Spanish Case

2004

Abstract In this paper, we use recent developments on threshold autoregressive (TAR) models that allow us to derive endogenously threshold effects in the evolution of the Spanish budget deficit. Specifically, a mean-reverting dynamic behaviour of the budget deficit should be expected once such threshold is reached.

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsDeficit spendingPublic economicsAutoregressive modeljel:E62EconomicsTarjel:H62FinanceFiscal policy Budget deficits Threshold effects TAR models.Fiscal policy
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