When is the Fiscal Multiplier High? A Comparison of Four Business Cycle Phases

Thursday 14th May 2020
CINET:
2024
Berge, T., De Ridder, M. and Pfajfar, D.
This paper compares the effect of fiscal spending on economic activity across four phases of the business cycle. We show that the fiscal multiplier is higher when unemployment is increasing than when it is decreasing. Conversely, fiscal multipliers do not depend on whether the unemployment rate is above or below its long-term trend. This result emerges both in the analysis of long time-series at the U.S. national level as well as for a post-Vietnam War panel of U.S. states. Our findings synthesize previous, at times conflicting, evidence on the state-dependence of fiscal multipliers and imply that fiscal intervention early on in economic downturns is most effective at stabilizing output.
Keywords
Fiscal multipliers
countercyclical policy
cross-sectional analysis
local projections
E62
C31
C32
Themes
transmission