United Kingdom: Selected Issues
March 7, 2002
Summary
This Selected Issues paper examines from an empirical standpoint the impact of fiscal aggregates on the evolution of output and the real effective exchange rate in the United Kingdom from the late 1970s to the present. It finds that the size of the dynamic fiscal multipliers is small, and often statistically nonsignificant. The paper also finds that the direction of the impact of taxes and government consumption, but not of social transfers, is, if anything, the reverse of that predicted by standard Keynesian models.
Subject: Consumption, Fiscal policy, Foreign exchange, Government consumption, Household consumption, National accounts, Real exchange rates
Keywords: appreciation, Consumption, consumption growth, CR, equilibrium RER, government consumption, Government consumption, household consumption, Household consumption, ISCR, productivity, Real exchange rates, response function
Pages:
74
Volume:
2002
DOI:
Issue:
046
Series:
Country Report No. 2002/046
Stock No:
1GBREA0022002
ISBN:
9781451814163
ISSN:
1934-7685





