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Do Subnational Fiscal Rules Foster Fiscal Discipline? New Empirical Evidence from Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 37

Do Subnational Fiscal Rules Foster Fiscal Discipline? New Empirical Evidence from Europe

This paper studies how fiscal rules interact with the intergovernmental fiscal framework to foster fiscal discipline among European subnational governments. We use political variables describing the fiscal attitudes of the central government as instruments to obtain consistent estimates of the impact of subnational fiscal rules on fiscal balances. The results suggest that the discipline-enhancing effect of fiscal rules is weaker when there are large “vertical fiscal imbalances” that is, large differences in revenue and spending assignments across the different levels of government. These findings imply that separate reforms to reduce excessive vertical fiscal imbalances complement a rules-based fiscal framework that is aimed at fostering fiscal discipline.

Workers at Risk
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 36

Workers at Risk

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021
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  • Publisher: Unknown

The COVID-19 pandemic is having unequal impacts. Research has highlighted that across race, gender, age, and income groups, the health and economic consequences of this crisis are far from uniform and other preexisting inequalities have been exacerbated. This paper focuses on the differential impact on the formal and informal segments of the labor market in India, using data from a large household panel survey and employing a difference-in-differences event study approach. Within the same industry and district, initially informal wage workers were significantly more vulnerable to the loss of employment than initially formal workers during the early phase of COVID-19 (April 2020). Furthermore...

Do Subnational Fiscal Rules Foster Fiscal Discipline? New Empirical Evidence from Europe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 37

Do Subnational Fiscal Rules Foster Fiscal Discipline? New Empirical Evidence from Europe

This paper studies how fiscal rules interact with the intergovernmental fiscal framework to foster fiscal discipline among European subnational governments. We use political variables describing the fiscal attitudes of the central government as instruments to obtain consistent estimates of the impact of subnational fiscal rules on fiscal balances. The results suggest that the discipline-enhancing effect of fiscal rules is weaker when there are large “vertical fiscal imbalances” that is, large differences in revenue and spending assignments across the different levels of government. These findings imply that separate reforms to reduce excessive vertical fiscal imbalances complement a rules-based fiscal framework that is aimed at fostering fiscal discipline.

Hidden Potential
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 387

Hidden Potential

Informality remains widespread in South Asia despite decades of economic growth. The low earnings and high vulnerability in the informal sector make this a major development issue for the region. Yet, there is no consensus on its causes and consequences, with the debate polarized between a view that informality is a problem of regulatory evasion and should be eradicated, and another that equates informality with economic exclusion. Recent advances in analyzing informality as the outcome of firm dynamics in distorted economic environments can help reconcile them. Building on these advances, the approach adopted in this volume clarifies that there are different types of informality, with diffe...

An Unobserved Components Phillips Curve in an Emerging Market Economy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 21

An Unobserved Components Phillips Curve in an Emerging Market Economy

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This paper reassesses inflation-output dynamics by modelling a Phillips curve for India. Instead of using an Autoregressive Distibuted Lag (ARDL) model, an Unobserved Components (UC) model is used to estimate a Phillips curve in which the lagged inflation term of the ARDL specification is replaced with an unobserved random walk, as in Harvey (2011). This facilitates model building and allows the use of the Kalman (1960) filter to compute output gap. Contrary to the literature which has been confined to the use of more conventional econometric techniques, the results of this paper indicate that a positive relationship between inflation and output gap cannot be ruled out for Indian data, even without explicitly controlling for supply shocks. This is a novel finding and stands in contrast to existing literature which is, at best, skeptical of any such relationship between inflation and output gap in India.

South Asia Economic Focus
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 212

South Asia Economic Focus

South Asia is facing renewed challenges. The impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on food and energy prices on domestic inflation is long-lasting. Externally, countries’ current account balances deteriorate rapidly as imports rise on the back of economic recovery and rising inflation, remittances decline, and foreign capital flows out following monetary tightening in advanced economies. An economic slowdown in advanced economies and trading partners can also be a drag to the exports sector and remittances inflows, which many countries in the region depend on. These immediate challenges can translate to persistent deterrent to long-term growth and development. Higher energy prices already are c...

IMF Research Bulletin, June 2016
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 9

IMF Research Bulletin, June 2016

In the June 2016 issue of IMF Research Bulletin, Eugenio Cerutti interviews Lars E.O. Svensson. Lars, a professor at the Stockholm School of Economics, was a Visiting Scholar at the IMF. In the interview, he discusses monetary policy, financial stability, and life at the IMF. The Bulletin also features a listing of recent Working Papers, Staff Discussion Notes, and key IMF publications. The table of contents from the latest issue of IMF Economic Review is also included.

Economic Survey 2017-18 (Volume I and Volume II)
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 845

Economic Survey 2017-18 (Volume I and Volume II)

The Economic Survey is the budget document of the Government of India. It presents the state of affairs of the Indian economy. Economic Survey 2017-18 consists of two volumes. Volume I provides an analytical overview of the performance of the Indian economy during the financial year 2017-18. It highlights the long-term challenges facing the economy. Volume II is a descriptive review of the major sectors of the economy. It emphasizes economic reforms of contemporary relevance like GST, the investment-saving slowdown, fiscal federalism and accountability, gender inequality, climate change and agriculture, science and technology, among others.

South Asia Economic Update October, 2020
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 134

South Asia Economic Update October, 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic, which is still impacting South Asia, has temporarily brought the region to a near standstill. Governments proactively stabilized activity through monetary easing, fiscal stimulus, and supportive financial regulation, but the situation is fragile amid weak buffers and exhausted policy tools. South Asia’s GDP is expected to contract 7.7 percent this year, by far the largest decline on record, but uncertainty around the forecast is substantial. The informal economy in South Asia has been hit hard. Many unorganized workers, self-employed people and microenterprises have experienced a large drop in earnings as the service sectors that were affected most by the lockdowns a...

How to Design Subnational Fiscal Rules
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 29

How to Design Subnational Fiscal Rules

This note discusses how to design subnational fiscal rules, including how to select them and calibrate them. It expands on the guidance provided at the national level on rule selection and calibration in IMF (2018a) and IMF (2018b). Thinking on subnational fiscal rules is still evolving, including their effectiveness (for example, Heinemann, Moessinger, and Yeter 2018; Kotia and Lledó 2016; Foremny 2014), and this note only provides a first analysis based on international experiences and the technical assistance provided by the IMF. Main findings are summarized in Box 1. The note is divided into five sections. The first section defines fiscal rules. The second section discusses the rationale for subnational rules. The third section provides some guidance on how to select the appropriate rule(s) and whether they should differ across individual jurisdictions. The fourth section explores the issue of flexibility by looking at how rules should adjust to shocks. Finally, the last section focuses on the “calibration” of the rules.