Self-defeating austerity entails “perverse effects” of fiscal consolidation such that fiscal indicators deteriorate. Inter alia, this depends on the size of the fiscal multiplier as Keynes (1933. The Means to Prosperity. London: Macmillan) underlined. We find that the government-expenditure multiplier was less than 1 in 1930s' Britain. Austerity was not self-defeating in the long run and even its initial impact probably did not raise the public debt-to-GDP ratio. In the later 1930s, there was a “fiscal free lunch” in that deficit-financed government spending would have improved public finances enough to pay for the interest on the extra debt
In this article, John Van Reenen looks at the UK’s economic performance since the global financial c...
State responses to the global financial and European sovereign debt crisis have been dominated by a ...
This paper discusses whether John Maynard Keynes’ "How to Pay for the War" provided prescriptions fo...
A new study from the thinktank the Progressive Economics Forum (PEF), published today, uses official...
This article analyses the logic underpinning austerity governance in the UK. Taking the UK’s relati...
In a recent article, Christopher Hood and Rozana Himaz put the recent era of austerity into historic...
We report estimates of the fiscal multiplier for interwar Britain based on quarterly data, time-seri...
The 2007/8 financial crisis has reignited the debate about austerity economics and revealed that it ...
Austerity has been a recurring theme of post-war British politics, from the 1950s right up to the pr...
This paper offers a formal analysis of the relationship between changes in government primary balanc...
In this paper, we provide a critical analysis of the theory of the expansionary austerity. We take t...
With European governments cutting back on spending, many are asking whether this could make matters ...
This paper examines contrasting experiences of the United Kingdom in addressing high public debt to ...
This paper analyzes local and global equilibrium dynamics in an optimizing endogenous growth model u...
In an article that originally appeared on Project Syndicate, Robert Skidelsky explores the illusions...
In this article, John Van Reenen looks at the UK’s economic performance since the global financial c...
State responses to the global financial and European sovereign debt crisis have been dominated by a ...
This paper discusses whether John Maynard Keynes’ "How to Pay for the War" provided prescriptions fo...
A new study from the thinktank the Progressive Economics Forum (PEF), published today, uses official...
This article analyses the logic underpinning austerity governance in the UK. Taking the UK’s relati...
In a recent article, Christopher Hood and Rozana Himaz put the recent era of austerity into historic...
We report estimates of the fiscal multiplier for interwar Britain based on quarterly data, time-seri...
The 2007/8 financial crisis has reignited the debate about austerity economics and revealed that it ...
Austerity has been a recurring theme of post-war British politics, from the 1950s right up to the pr...
This paper offers a formal analysis of the relationship between changes in government primary balanc...
In this paper, we provide a critical analysis of the theory of the expansionary austerity. We take t...
With European governments cutting back on spending, many are asking whether this could make matters ...
This paper examines contrasting experiences of the United Kingdom in addressing high public debt to ...
This paper analyzes local and global equilibrium dynamics in an optimizing endogenous growth model u...
In an article that originally appeared on Project Syndicate, Robert Skidelsky explores the illusions...
In this article, John Van Reenen looks at the UK’s economic performance since the global financial c...
State responses to the global financial and European sovereign debt crisis have been dominated by a ...
This paper discusses whether John Maynard Keynes’ "How to Pay for the War" provided prescriptions fo...