Public Investment, Growth, and Debt Sustainability : Putting together the Pieces /

We develop a model to study the macroeconomic effects of public investment surges in low-income countries, making explicit: (i) the investment-growth linkages; (ii) public external and domestic debt accumulation; (iii) the fiscal policy reactions necessary to ensure debt-sustainability; and (iv) the...

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Autor principal: Berg, Andrew
Altres autors: Buffie, Edward, Pattillo, Catherine, Portillo, Rafael
Format: Revista
Idioma:English
Publicat: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2012.
Col·lecció:IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 2012/144
Accés en línia:Full text available on IMF
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100 1 |a Berg, Andrew. 
245 1 0 |a Public Investment, Growth, and Debt Sustainability :   |b Putting together the Pieces /  |c Andrew Berg, Rafael Portillo, Edward Buffie, Catherine Pattillo. 
264 1 |a Washington, D.C. :  |b International Monetary Fund,  |c 2012. 
300 |a 1 online resource (54 pages) 
490 1 |a IMF Working Papers 
500 |a <strong>Off-Campus Access:</strong> No User ID or Password Required 
500 |a <strong>On-Campus Access:</strong> No User ID or Password Required 
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520 3 |a We develop a model to study the macroeconomic effects of public investment surges in low-income countries, making explicit: (i) the investment-growth linkages; (ii) public external and domestic debt accumulation; (iii) the fiscal policy reactions necessary to ensure debt-sustainability; and (iv) the macroeconomic adjustment required to ensure internal and external balance. Well-executed high-yielding public investment programs can substantially raise output and consumption and be self-financing in the long run. However, even if the long run looks good, transition problems can be formidable when concessional financing does not cover the full cost of the investment program. Covering the resulting gap with tax increases or spending cuts requires sharp macroeconomic adjustments, crowding out private investment and consumption and delaying the growth benefits of public investment. Covering the gap with domestic borrowing market is not helpful either: higher domestic rates increase the financing challenge and private investment and consumption are still crowded out. Supplementing with external commercial borrowing, on the other hand, can smooth these difficult adjustments, reconciling the scaling up with feasibility constraints on increases in tax rates. But the strategy may be also risky. With poor execution, sluggish fiscal policy reactions, or persistent negative exogenous shocks, this strategy can easily lead to unsustainable public debt dynamics. Front-loaded investment programs and weak structural conditions (such as low returns to public capital and poor execution of investments) make the fiscal adjustment more challenging and the risks greater. 
538 |a Mode of access: Internet 
700 1 |a Buffie, Edward. 
700 1 |a Pattillo, Catherine. 
700 1 |a Portillo, Rafael. 
830 0 |a IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;  |v No. 2012/144 
856 4 0 |z Full text available on IMF  |u http://elibrary.imf.org/view/journals/001/2012/144/001.2012.issue-144-en.xml  |z IMF e-Library