Household Debt and Fiscal Multipliers
We study the size of government spending multipliers in a general equilibrium model with search and matching frictions in which we allow for different levels of household indebtedness. The main results of the paper are: (a) the presence of impatient households and private debt helps generate government spending multipliers greater than 1; (b) as financial conditions worsen and impatient consumers find it more difficult to borrow (i.e. in a credit crunch), the size of the government spending multiplier falls; (c) conversely, employment, vacancies and unemployment multipliers are larger when access to credit becomes more difficult; and (d) the model explains the observed pattern of responses of labour market variables, housing prices and private debt to a fiscal shock reasonably well. On these grounds it outperforms the standard model with Rule-of-Thumb consumers whose predictions for the labour market are at odds with the data.
Year of publication: |
2015-03
|
---|---|
Authors: | Andrés, Javier ; Boscá, José E. ; Ferri, Javier |
Institutions: | FEDEA |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Instruments, rules and household debt: The effects of fiscal policy
Andrés, Javier, (2015)
-
Andrés, Javier, (2010)
-
Job creation in Spain : productivity growth, labour market reforms or both?
Andrés, Javier, (2011)
- More ...