This article investigates the effect of government partisanship on fiscal policy outputs during the three international economic crises of 1981–1984, 1990–1994 and 2008–2013. Encompassing 19–23 advanced democracies, the statistical analysis suggests that partisan effects have increased over time and are characterized, in the two last crises, by a “new asymmetry” whereby left governments pursued more contractionary fiscal policies than non-left governments over the course of the business cycle. Furthermore, it attributes left governments’ endorsement of austere fiscal policies to the constraining effects of financial markets in the context of high/surging debt. This is supported by qualitative analysis of select government responses to the G...
This is the introduction to the Virtual Special Issue on Austerity, drawing articles from the three ...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
Two decades ago many commentators suggested that economic globalisation had eroded social democratic...
Daunting fiscal policy challenges face democratic systems throughout the world. Fiscal austerity in ...
In the aftermath of the global economic crisis, the challenges facing welfare states are unprecedent...
This article investigates fiscal policy responses to the Great Recession in historical perspective. ...
In 2010–2015 almost all democratic countries pursued austerity. Then countries exited austerity, alt...
Major economic crises may promote structural reforms, by increasing the cost of the status quo, or h...
The global crisis interacted heavily with fiscal policy in the run-up to the crisis, during the cris...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
The New Politics of the welfare state suggests that periods of welfare retrenchment present policy-m...
The financial crisis that erupted in 2007 triggered the deepest global recession since the 1930s. In...
The 2007/8 financial crisis has reignited the debate about austerity economics and revealed that it ...
Utilising a nonlinear (regime-switching) mixed-frequency panel vector autoregression model, we study...
Do the ideological preferences of governments affect macroeconomic variables? According to partisan ...
This is the introduction to the Virtual Special Issue on Austerity, drawing articles from the three ...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
Two decades ago many commentators suggested that economic globalisation had eroded social democratic...
Daunting fiscal policy challenges face democratic systems throughout the world. Fiscal austerity in ...
In the aftermath of the global economic crisis, the challenges facing welfare states are unprecedent...
This article investigates fiscal policy responses to the Great Recession in historical perspective. ...
In 2010–2015 almost all democratic countries pursued austerity. Then countries exited austerity, alt...
Major economic crises may promote structural reforms, by increasing the cost of the status quo, or h...
The global crisis interacted heavily with fiscal policy in the run-up to the crisis, during the cris...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
The New Politics of the welfare state suggests that periods of welfare retrenchment present policy-m...
The financial crisis that erupted in 2007 triggered the deepest global recession since the 1930s. In...
The 2007/8 financial crisis has reignited the debate about austerity economics and revealed that it ...
Utilising a nonlinear (regime-switching) mixed-frequency panel vector autoregression model, we study...
Do the ideological preferences of governments affect macroeconomic variables? According to partisan ...
This is the introduction to the Virtual Special Issue on Austerity, drawing articles from the three ...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
Two decades ago many commentators suggested that economic globalisation had eroded social democratic...