Fiscal Volatility Shocks and Economic Activity
University of Bonn · Emory University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
We study how unexpected changes in uncertainty about fiscal policy affect economic activity. First, we estimate tax and spending processes for the United States with time-varying volatility to uncover evidence of time-varying volatility. Second, we estimate a VAR for the US economy using the time-varying volatility found in the previous step. Third, we feed the tax and spending processes into an otherwise standard New Keynesian model. Both in the VAR and in the model, we find that unexpected changes in fiscal volatility shocks can have a sizable adverse effect on economic activity. An endogenous increase in markups is a key mechanism. (JEL E12, E23, E32, E52, E62)
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 146.22
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 95
Authors
4- JFJesús Fernández‐VillaverdeCorresponding
University of Bonn, Emory University, Bank of Spain, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania, Bank of Canada
- PGPablo Guerrón-Quintana
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
- KKKeith Kuester
University of Bonn
- JFJuan Francisco Rubio-Ramı́rez
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Emory University
Topics & keywords
- Economics
- Volatility (finance)
- Fiscal policy
- New Keynesian economics
- Monetary economics
- Business cycle
- Macroeconomics
- Econometrics