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Tax Cuts And Interest Rate Cuts: An Empirical Comparison Of The Effectiveness Of Fiscal And Monetary Policy
Author(s) -
Tricia Coxwell Snyder,
Donald Bruce
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of business and economics research (jber)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2157-8893
pISSN - 1542-4448
DOI - 10.19030/jber.v2i8.2906
Subject(s) - economics , fiscal policy , style (visual arts) , monetary policy , span (engineering) , monetary economics , tax policy , tax reform , public economics , history , archaeology , civil engineering , engineering
Can expansionary fiscal or monetary policy stimulate the U.S. economy in light of recent events? Using an Error-Correction-Vectorautoregression, we examine the relative effectiveness of both types of governmental stabilization policy. Unlike previous studies, we use a more general error correction vectorautoregression (ECM) approach. Our focus is on determining the relative explanatory power of measures of monetary policy (M2 and the Federal Funds Rate) and fiscal policy (marginal income tax rates and government spending) in explaining movements in consumption, investment, and output. Results suggest that monetary policy is relatively more powerful than fiscal policy.

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