State of confidence, overborrowing and the macroeconomic stabilization puzzle
In this paper we model macroeconomic instability as the outcome of the dynamical interaction between debt accumulation and the “state of confidence” in a small open economy with a super-fixed exchange rate arrangement. Our analysis is set in a theoretical framework where balance-sheets effects govern external financing to firms and the state of confidence is largely pro-cyclical. We analyse the conditions for the dominance of unstable chains in the out-of-equilibrium dynamics which determine financial fragility, systemic instability and, as a consequence, macroeconomic stabilization puzzle. Indeed, the choice of a tight fiscal policy is likely to be destabilizing inasmuch as it exacerbates the liquidity crunch taking place in the course of a recession. At the same time, a reduction in interest rates may not be sufficient to switch off macroeconomic instability, and a direct stimulus to aggregate expenditure may be required to avoid an economic collapse. We conduct an “experimental” study with reference to Argentina during the currency board years in order to understand what the implications would have been for dynamical stability of “appropriate” monetary and fiscal policies oriented to macroeconomic stabilization. Our empirical results are based on the sensitivity analysis of a continuous-time econometric model and confirm the dangerousness of conventional austerity policies in times of recession.
C33 - Models with Panel Data ; C62 - Existence and Stability Conditions of Equilibrium ; C61 - Optimization Techniques; Programming Models; Dynamic Analysis ; O11 - Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development ; O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes ; O34 - Intellectual Property Rights: National and International Issues