Identifying Fiscal Policy (in)effectiveness From The Differential Counter-cyclicality Of Government Spending In The Interwar Period

QED Working Paper Number
1290

Differences across decades in the counter-cyclical stance of fiscal policy can identify whether the growth in government spending affects output growth and so speeds recovery from a recession. We study government-spending reaction functions from the 1920s and 1930s for twenty countries. There are two main findings. First, surprisingly, government spending was less counter-cyclical in the 1930s than in the 1920s. Second, the growth of government spending did not have a significant effect on output growth, so that there is little evidence that this feature of fiscal policy played a stabilizing role in the interwar period.

Author(s)

Nicolas-Guillaume Martineau

JEL Codes

Keywords

fiscal policy
business-cycle history
Great Depression
interwar period

Working Paper

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