Determining the fiscal policy time-frame: the dominance of exogenous circumstances.
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Noon, Adrian Kenneth
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Graduate Program in Public Policy, Australian National University
Abstract
Fiscal policy is one of the fundamental tools of political management, and of
macro-economic policy. This paper largely confines itself to the second of
these functions. It investigates the question of whether there are any
circumstances which justify using fiscal policy in a counter-cyclical
stabilisation role. The economic issues relevant to this question are assessed,
on the basis of the literature and empirical evidence, under three headings:
1. the objectives to which policy may effectively be directed;
2. the economic circumstances and outlook; and
3. the varying impacts and lags of the principal policy instruments.
This analysis recognises the close inter-relationships between fiscal policy
and the other principal macro-economic policy instruments (monetary
policy and wages policy). The evidence suggests that there is a countercyclical role for fiscal policy in circumstances where there is a significant Keynesian slump in aggregate demand. Such circumstances demand active fiscal response, that is, allowing the automatic stabilisers to perform their "duty" will not be a sufficient enough injection to effective demand to arrest the slump.
In periods of growth, and/or in the presence of a high current account
deficit that is indicative of structural imbalance within the domestic
economy, however, there are strong grounds for assigning wages policy to
the employment (and growth) objective/s. This allows policy-makers the
choice of switching fiscal policy to the structural issues such as the balance
of payments: a particularly important option for Australia with its relatively
high vulnerability to exogenous economic shocks.
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Noon, A.K. (1992). Determining the fiscal policy time-frame: The dominance of exogenous circumstances. Public Policy Discussion Paper No. 30. Canberra, ACT: Graduate Program in Public Policy, The Australian National University.
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