Twin Deficit Flashcards
What is the twin deficit hypothesis
if, then
If fiscal deficit, then there would also be a current account deficit
What is the equation for the primary fiscal deficit?
Primary fiscal deficit =
What is the equation for the secondary fiscal deficit?
Secondary fiscal deficit =
Dervive the economy with a government sector budget constraint
Gov budget:
PDV of Gov. spending = PDV of tac revenue + initial Gov. assets
Period 1: Period 2:
Transversality condition:
Households budget:
Putting in Gov. budget constraint into household:
PDV of private + public consumption = PDV of endowments + initial foreign wealth
For ease
Optimal consumption in the economy with a government sector budget constraint:
What does the obudget constraint for an economy with a Gov. sector show?
Economy’s resource constraint depends only on G1and G2and is INDEPENDENT of T1and T2 timing of taxes is irrelevant for optimal allocation + tax cuts have NO effect on CA
Prove that the timing of taxes is irrelevant for optimal allocation + tax cuts have NO effect on C, + therefore on CA
Gov. budget constraint:
Assume , and as gov. spending remains unchanged:
Tax cut in period 1 must leave PDV of taxes unchanged****a tax cut in period 1 leads to a tax increase in period 2
HH constraint:
From HH budget constraint in period 1 :
as-
If increase, households save the equivalent in amount to smooth consumption in p1.
What does ricardian equivlance show?
a reduction of government savings via a tax cut in the current period, that leaves government spending unchanged, has no real effects as households increase their saving by an equivalent amount leaves consumption allocation unchanged àCA unchanged, twin deficit hypothesis fails
How does CA change when T1 or T2 changes but G spending remains the same?
CA is unchanged due to richardian equivalence
How does the CA change when G spending changes?
Consumption falls in response to a temporary increase in government spending, but by less than the increase in government spending (as household uses assets to smooth consumption by borrowing more)TB deteriorates, +CA deteriorates, but both by less than the increase in Gov. spending. Twin deficit hypothesis holds.
Mathematical Proof:
and
Why may does the Ricardian equivalance fail?
Tax cuts must also cause CA to fall, due to:
- Borrowing Constraints
- Intergenerational effects
- Distortionary Taxation
Explain how borrowing constraint cause Ricardian Equivilence to fail
. P1 HH budget constraint: Borrowing constraint: .
Assume borrowing constraint is binding: consumption basket is not at optimum level
+ we observe twin deficit
In order for a tax cut to lead to a CA deterioration of the same magnitude, 100% of households benefiting from the tax cut must have borrowing constraints.
Explain how intergenerations effects cause Ricardian Equivilence to fail
àGeneration that benefits from the tax cut are not the same as the one that pays for the future tax increase / agents are not forward looking.
Assume households are 1-peroid lived ( assume
Generation alive in P1 budget constraint:
Generation alive in P2 budget constraint:
Gov. budget constraint:
observe twin deficit
Explain how distorionary taxes cause Ricardian Equivilence to fail
P1&2 HH budget constraint :
s.t. budget constraint: (wedge between MRS and 1+r)
Substitution effect:If, then household should increaseand decrease decrease inmost likely would lead to increase inandàRicardian equivalence fails
Checking income effect = 0
P1&2 Gov. BC: & -
Assume Gov. spending is exogenous, and taxes are so that the budget constraint is satisfied
Combing household and Gov. budget constraint: - no change economy wide resource constraint (no income effect)
increases and
What are Ramsey Optimal Tax conditions?
- Household maximises:
- Household budget:
- Gov. budget:
- No arbitrage condition:
Work the solution of Ramsey Optimal Tax policy
- Combine HH and Gov. budget constraint à
- Max utility subject to this aggregated constraint (less constrained) - set so that (1) holds
- Pick so that (4) holds
- Sub into household constraint + solve for - set so (2) holds
- Combine the combined BC with the HH BC (2) to show (3) holds