Fiscal Policy, Private Investment and Economic Growth: Evidence from G-7 Countries
Document Type
Article
Source of Publication
SSRN Electronic Journal
Publication Date
1-1-2003
Abstract
Measuring the effects of fiscal policy on economic growth is difficult, because fiscal policy variables are influenced by changes in income. This paper uses an unbalanced panel data set for G-7 countries for the period 1965-2000 that includes annual estimates of cyclically adjusted government expenditures, capital outlays, income tax revenues, indirect tax revenues, corporate tax revenues and social security tax revenues, based on definitions developed by OECD revenue statistics. The percentage share of these estimates in GDP is used to investigate the effects of fiscal policy on economic growth, and results are compared with regression results that use 5-year averages of cyclically unadjusted variables. The empirical results from both sets of regressions suggest that only taxes on household income and government expenditures have negative effects on per capita income growth. We consolidate our findings by showing that both government expenditures and income taxes have distortionary effects on private investment.
DOI Link
ISSN
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Disciplines
Business
Recommended Citation
Arin, Kerim Peren, "Fiscal Policy, Private Investment and Economic Growth: Evidence from G-7 Countries" (2003). All Works. 1685.
https://zuscholars.zu.ac.ae/works/1685
Indexed in Scopus
no
Open Access
yes
Open Access Type
Green: A manuscript of this publication is openly available in a repository