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Unconventional Fiscal Policy
Author(s) -
Francesco D’Acunto,
Daniel Hoang,
Michael Weber
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
aea papers and proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2574-0776
pISSN - 2574-0768
DOI - 10.1257/pandp.20181061
Subject(s) - economics , inflation (cosmology) , exploit , consumption (sociology) , fiscal policy , monetary economics , consumption tax , monetary policy , value (mathematics) , consumer expenditure survey , macroeconomics , public economics , indirect tax , tax reform , aggregate expenditure , social science , physics , computer security , machine learning , sociology , theoretical physics , computer science
Unconventional fiscal policy uses announcements of future increases in consumption taxes to generate inflation expectations and accelerate consumption expenditure. It is budget neutral and time consistent. We provide preliminary evidence for the effectiveness of such policies using changes in value-added tax (VAT) and household survey data for Poland. We find households increased their inflation expectations and willingness to purchase durables before the increase in VAT. Future research has to ensure income, wealth effects, or intratemporal substitution channels cannot explain these results and ideally exploit exogenous variation in VAT in a fixed nominal interest rate environment.

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