Sustainability of the fiscal imbalance and public debt under fiscal policy asymmetries in Sri Lanka
Abstract
This paper investigates the sustainability of Sri Lanka’s fiscal imbalance and public debt. To
test for sustainability of the fiscal imbalance, the study applies a symmetric ARDL
(autoregressive distributive lag) technique to estimate a government intertemporal budget
constraint. And to test for sustainability of public debt, it applies an asymmetric ARDL
technique to estimate a fiscal reaction function, which allows for differential responses in
the primary budget balance depending on whether shocks to regressors are positive or
negative. Annual data for the period 1961–2018 are used in the estimations. The results
indicate that Sri Lanka’s fiscal management is inconsistent with strong form sustainability,
which requires that expenditures not grow faster than revenues. However, estimation of
the fiscal reaction function finds robust evidence for fiscal policy asymmetries. Evidence
emerges that Sri Lanka’s fiscal policy stance is procyclical with strong stabilization
tendencies in economic expansions that are not sustained in contractions. Against upsurges
in the debt-to-GDP ratio, authorities are found to pursue fiscal consolidation, thus
suggesting weak form sustainability.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Asian Economics
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31