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Estimating a fiscal reaction function: the case of debt sustainability in Brazil

Luiz de Mello

Applied Economics, 2008, vol. 40, issue 3, 271-284

Abstract: This article reviews recent trends in fiscal performance in Brazil, estimates fiscal reaction functions for the consolidated public sector and different levels of government, and tests for the sustainability of the public debt dynamics. The empirical analysis, based on monthly data for the period 1995-2004, suggests that all levels of government react strongly to changes in indebtedness by adjusting their primary budget surplus targets. In addition, the central government appears to follow a spend-and-tax policy: changes in revenue are affected strongly by expenditure. About two-thirds of changes in primary spending are offset by higher revenue over the longer term. Institutions are also found to matter for fiscal sustainability. The responsiveness of the sub-national fiscal stance to indebtedness, as well as that of central government revenue to changes in primary spending, appears to have become stronger after 1998, when ceilings on indebtedness were introduced.

Date: 2008
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Working Paper: Estimating a Fiscal Reaction Function: The Case of Debt Sustainability in Brazil (2005) Downloads
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DOI: 10.1080/00036840500461873

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