Tsuruga, T.Wake, S.2025-03-272025-03-272206-0332https://hdl.handle.net/1885/733743652Previous studies argue that, based on the New Keynesian framework, a fiscal stimulus financed by money creation has a strong positive effect on output under a reasonable degree of nominal price rigidities. This paper investigates the effects of an implementation lag in a money-financed fiscal stimulus on output. We show that if a money-financed government purchase has a time lag between the decision and the implementation: (1) it may cause a recession rather than a boom when the economy is in normal times||(2) it may deepen a recession when the economy is in a liquidity trap||(3) the longer the implementation lag, the deeper the recession||and (4) the depth of the recession depends on the interest semi-elasticity of money demand. Our results imply that, if money demand is unstable, the money-financed fiscal stimulus with an implementation lag may have unstable effects on output, in contrast to the debt-financed fiscal stimulus.en-AUAuthor(s) retain copyrightMoney-financed fiscal stimulus: The effects of implementation lag2019-01