Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth

Can economic growth increase public debt? Previous studies on the debt-growth nexus focused on the effects of debt on growth. We present an opposite perspective by showing that growth can reinforce deficit spending. A political economy model of endogenous public debt indicates that the underlying ca...

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Main Authors: Raveh, O, Tsur, Y
Format: Working paper
Published: University of Oxford 2017
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author Raveh, O
Tsur, Y
author_facet Raveh, O
Tsur, Y
author_sort Raveh, O
collection OXFORD
description Can economic growth increase public debt? Previous studies on the debt-growth nexus focused on the effects of debt on growth. We present an opposite perspective by showing that growth can reinforce deficit spending. A political economy model of endogenous public debt indicates that the underlying cause is political short-sightedness induced by reelection prospects. Reelection yields accountability but at the same time shortens incumbents' time horizon, giving rise to political myopia and the ensuing budget deficit bias. Our model shows that economic growth exacerbates this undesirable effect of reelection. We test the model's predictions using a panel of U.S. states over the period 1963-2007. Our identification strategy rests on constitutionally-entrenched differences in gubernatorial term limits that provide plausibly exogenous cross-state variation in political time horizon, and aggregate national TFP shocks that are exogenous to individual states. Our more conservative estimates indicate that over a course of five years, a one standard deviation positive TFP shock induces an increase of approximately $494 in real per capita public debt in politically myopic states.
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spelling oxford-uuid:8532aab0-875c-4a32-acfc-0c68a5a1b7772022-03-26T21:55:50ZPolitical myopia, public debt, and economic growthWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:8532aab0-875c-4a32-acfc-0c68a5a1b777Bulk import via SwordSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Oxford2017Raveh, OTsur, YCan economic growth increase public debt? Previous studies on the debt-growth nexus focused on the effects of debt on growth. We present an opposite perspective by showing that growth can reinforce deficit spending. A political economy model of endogenous public debt indicates that the underlying cause is political short-sightedness induced by reelection prospects. Reelection yields accountability but at the same time shortens incumbents' time horizon, giving rise to political myopia and the ensuing budget deficit bias. Our model shows that economic growth exacerbates this undesirable effect of reelection. We test the model's predictions using a panel of U.S. states over the period 1963-2007. Our identification strategy rests on constitutionally-entrenched differences in gubernatorial term limits that provide plausibly exogenous cross-state variation in political time horizon, and aggregate national TFP shocks that are exogenous to individual states. Our more conservative estimates indicate that over a course of five years, a one standard deviation positive TFP shock induces an increase of approximately $494 in real per capita public debt in politically myopic states.
spellingShingle Raveh, O
Tsur, Y
Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth
title Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth
title_full Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth
title_fullStr Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth
title_full_unstemmed Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth
title_short Political myopia, public debt, and economic growth
title_sort political myopia public debt and economic growth
work_keys_str_mv AT raveho politicalmyopiapublicdebtandeconomicgrowth
AT tsury politicalmyopiapublicdebtandeconomicgrowth