By using the Survey of Professional Forecasters, we provide new evidence on the open economy effects of government spending, focusing on a key puzzle in the literature, that the real exchange rate depreciates in response to a scal expansion. Much of government spending is well anticipated over a one year horizon. Once news and surprise shocks are treated as ddifferent shocks, there is no depreciation puzzle for news shocks while it is still there with surprise shocks. Fiscal foresight seems to lie at the heart of the different exchange rate responses to news and surprise shocks, depending on the timing of the anticipated budget adjustment following the shock. Indeed, the results are broadly consistent with the prediction of a DSGE model wit...
This paper studies how the effects of government spending vary with the economic environ-ment. Using...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
This study analyses the consequences of productive government spending on the international transmis...
By using the Survey of Professional Forecasters, we provide new evidence on the open economy effects...
We identify government spending news and surprise shocks using a novel identification based on the S...
This paper investigates the effects of government spending on the real exchange rate and the trade b...
A robust prediction across a wide range of open-economy macroeconomic models is that an unanticipate...
Using panel structural VAR analysis and quarterly data from four industrialized countries, we docum...
This paper studies the real exchange rate response to a government-spending shock in a two-country m...
The paper re-investigates the effects of government spending shocks on the real exchange rate and in...
We employ structural VAR techniques to estimate, for a series of OECD countries, the effects of gove...
We estimate the impact of shocks to government spending on the real exchange rate for a panel of EMU...
JEL No. E32,E6,F41 Using panel structural VAR analysis and quarterly data from four industrialized c...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
This paper studies how the effects of government spending vary with the economic environ-ment. Using...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
This study analyses the consequences of productive government spending on the international transmis...
By using the Survey of Professional Forecasters, we provide new evidence on the open economy effects...
We identify government spending news and surprise shocks using a novel identification based on the S...
This paper investigates the effects of government spending on the real exchange rate and the trade b...
A robust prediction across a wide range of open-economy macroeconomic models is that an unanticipate...
Using panel structural VAR analysis and quarterly data from four industrialized countries, we docum...
This paper studies the real exchange rate response to a government-spending shock in a two-country m...
The paper re-investigates the effects of government spending shocks on the real exchange rate and in...
We employ structural VAR techniques to estimate, for a series of OECD countries, the effects of gove...
We estimate the impact of shocks to government spending on the real exchange rate for a panel of EMU...
JEL No. E32,E6,F41 Using panel structural VAR analysis and quarterly data from four industrialized c...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
This paper studies how the effects of government spending vary with the economic environ-ment. Using...
We study the effects of government spending by using a structural, large dimensional, dynamic factor...
This study analyses the consequences of productive government spending on the international transmis...