6533b831fe1ef96bd1298d1c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

When Fiscal Consolidation Meets Private Deleveraging

Javier AndrésOscar ArceCarlos Thomas

subject

media_common.quotation_subjectCollateralized debt obligation05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologies021107 urban & regional planning02 engineering and technologyMonetary economicsConsolidation (business)Debt0502 economics and business8. Economic growthCredibilityEconomics050207 economicsDeleveragingWelfaremedia_common

description

We analyze the interaction between fiscal consolidation and private-sector deleveraging in an economy within a monetary union. Pre-existing long term collateralized private debt – a core ingredient of the deleveraging process – plays a critical role in shaping fiscal multipliers. By buffering the short-run fall in debtors’ spending capacity, long-run private debt reduces the short-run multipliers of aggressive (large and/or fast) consolidations. However, absent credibility concerns, aggressive consolidations raise the intensity and length of private deleveraging, causing higher output losses over the medium run. In terms of discounted output losses and welfare, this latter effect dominates, so that larger and faster consolidations are relatively costlier than smaller and more gradual ones. Also, in this environment, alternative budgetary instruments generate sizable differences in terms of their incidence on private deleveraging dynamics and, hence, on the overall output costs of fiscal consolidations.

https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2850853