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Deficit Financing in LCDS: Evidence from South Asia

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-14, 04:54 authored by Muhammad Chowdhury
Fiscal policy triggers three distinct effects on the economy such as (1) interest rate effect (2) price effect and (3) exchange rate effect. A VAR system was developed to capture these effects in jive South Asian countries. Empirical results suggest that budgetary action does not have any perceptible influence ·on the interest rate of the sampled countries. In terms of the price effect, fiscal action has opposite effects in Bangladesh and India. Fiscal action tends to increase aggregate price level in India but reduces the price level in Bangladesh, although the magnitude is very small. For Pakistan the price effect is positive but statistically insignificant while the price effect for Nepal and Sri Lanka is negative but statistically insignificant. Fiscal action is found to have no perceptible influence on the exchange rates of the sampled countries except Nepal where increased government expenditure tends to appreciate the Nepali currency. Overall, empirical findings suggest that expansionary fiscal action does not lead to crowding out behaviour in the sampled countries.

History

Citation

Chowdhury, M. K. (2005). Deficit Financing in LCDS: Evidence from South Asia. Middle East Business and Economic Review, 17 (1), 58-69.

Journal title

Middle East Business and Economic Review

Volume

17

Issue

1

Pagination

58-69

Language

English

RIS ID

12011

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