IMF Working Papers

Fiscal Implications of Government Wage Bill Spending

By Kamil Dybczak, Mercedes Garcia-Escribano

January 15, 2019

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Kamil Dybczak, and Mercedes Garcia-Escribano. Fiscal Implications of Government Wage Bill Spending, (USA: International Monetary Fund, 2019) accessed September 19, 2024

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Summary

This paper discusses the short- and medium-term fiscal implications of government wage bill spending. Working with a sample of 137 advanced, emerging and low-income countries, we use a panel VAR approach to identify differences in the dynamic behavior of revenues, nonwage expenditures, and the overall fiscal balance in response to changes in the wage bill. We show that the interaction between wage bill changes and these three fiscal items is alike and varies overtime. Higher wage bill spending does not revert in the medium term, but the initial worsening of the fiscal balance associated with it, though it persists, eventually halves as revenues increase while non-wage spending remains broadly unchanged. We also show that countries differ in how these three fiscal variables behave following wage bill changes and seek to explain this variation by a set of country characteristics, including the level of development, access to natural resources and public indebtedness levels.

Subject: Environment, Expenditure, Fiscal policy, Fiscal stance, Labor, Natural resources, Wage adjustments, Wages

Keywords: Bill, Bill development, Bill expansion, Bill financing, Bill increase, Bill spending, Bill surge, Central Asia, Europe, Fiscal Policy, Fiscal stance, GDP share, Government Expenditure, Natural resources, Pattern of wage bill financing, Public Employment, Public Wages, Revenue, Wage adjustments, Wage bill, Wage bill change, Wage bill expansion, Wage expenditure, Wages, Western Europe, WP

Publication Details

  • Pages:

    33

  • Volume:

    ---

  • DOI:

    ---

  • Issue:

    ---

  • Series:

    Working Paper No. 2019/010

  • Stock No:

    WPIEA2019010

  • ISBN:

    9781484392157

  • ISSN:

    1018-5941