Private Sector Consumption Behavior and Non-Keynesian Effects of Fiscal Policy

This paper explores the hypothesis that the propensity to consume out of income is not constant but varies, perhaps in a nonlinear fashion, with fiscal variables. It examines whether there is any empirical evidence to support the hypothesis that households move from non-Ricardian to Ricardian behavior as government debt reaches high levels and as uncertainty about future taxes increases. The paper also examines the possibility of a relationship (along the lines of the Bertola-Drazen model) between the propensity to consume out of income and the government consumption-to-GDP ratio.
Publication date: August 1999
ISBN: 9781451853582
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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics- Macroeconomics , government debt , government consumption , Ricardian behavior , non-Keynesian effects , household income , government spending , permanent income , fiscal consolidation , fiscal variables

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