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Two puzzling observations have motivated this paper: First, the standard paradigm of optimal fiscal policy, following Lucas & Stokey (1983), assumes counterfactually that public debt is held in state-contingent securities. Is the existing theory as irrelevant as it is silent about fiscal policy...
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We study the Ramsey policy problem in an economy in which firms face a collateral constraint. Issuing more public debt alleviates this friction by increasing the aggregate quantity of collateral. In so doing, however, the issuance of more debt also raises interest rates, which in turn increases...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013035953
We study the Ramsey policy problem in an economy in which public debt contributes to the supply of assets that private agents can use as buffer stock and collateral, or as a vehicle of liquidity. Issuing more debt eases the underlying financial friction. This raises welfare by improving the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012979778
We study the Ramsey policy problem in an economy in which firms face a collateral constraint. Issuing more public debt alleviates this friction by increasing the aggregate quantity of collateral. In so doing, however, the issuance of more debt also raises interest rates, which in turn increases...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013087355
In HANK models, fiscal deficits drive aggregate demand and thus inflation because households are non-Ricardian; in the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level (FTPL), they instead do so via equilibrium selection. Because of this difference, the mapping from deficits to inflation in HANK is robust to...
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