04480nam 2200685Ia 450 991082790860332120200520144314.01-4639-4565-51-4639-4564-7(CKB)2550000000106244(EBL)1606592(SSID)ssj0000953154(PQKBManifestationID)11510998(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000953154(PQKBWorkID)10906460(PQKB)11482138(Au-PeEL)EBL1606592(CaPaEBR)ebr10566414(OCoLC)777372521(IMF)WPIEE2012052(IMF)WPIEA2012052(MiAaPQ)EBC1606592(EXLCZ)99255000000010624420130221d2012 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrFiscal policy and the real exchange rate /by Santanu Chatterjee and Azer Mursagulov1st ed.[Washington, D.C.] International Monetary Fund[2012]1 online resource (42 p.)IMF working paper ;WP/12/52"February 2012."1-4639-4563-9 1-4639-3713-X Includes bibliographical references.Cover; Contents; 1. Introduction; 2. The Analytical Framework; 2.1. Resource allocation in the private sector; 2.2. The public sector; 2.3. Macroeconomic equilibrium; 2.4. Current account dynamics; 3. Numerical Analysis; 3.1. The benchmark equilibrium; 3.2. Fiscal policy shocks; 3.3. Exchange rate dynamics: sensitivity to financing policies; 3.4. The persistence of the real exchange rate; 3.5. The short-run correlation between government spending and private consumption; 4. Sensitivity Analysis; 4.1. Sectoral output elasticity of public capital; 4.2. Elasticity of substitution in production4.3. Intersectoral adjustment costs 5. Conclusions; Tables; 1. Benchmark equilibrium; 2. Government spending shocks: Long-run effects; 3. Government spending and the real exchange rate; 4. Government spending and short-run consumption; Figures; 1. Government spending shocks; 2. Government spending and the real exchange rate: sensitivity to financing policies; 3. Government spending, the persistence of the real exchange rate, and the time horizon; 4. Government spending and consumption: sensitivity to the sectoral elasticity of public capital5. Government spending and the real exchange rate: sensitivity to the sectoral elasticity of public capital 6. Government spending and the real exchange rate: sensitivity to the elasticity of substitution in production; 7. Government spending and the real exchange rate: sensitivity to intersectoral adjustment costs; ReferencesGovernment spending on infrastructure has recently increased sharply in many emerging-market economies. This paper examines the mechanism through which public infrastructure spending affects the dynamics of the real exchange rate. Using a two-sector dependent open economy model with intersectoral adjustment costs, we show that government spending generates a non-monotonic U-shaped adjustment path for the real exchange rate with sharp intertemporal trade-offs. The effect of government spending on the real exchange rate depends critically on (i) the composition of public spending, (ii) the underlying financing policy, (iii) the intensity of private capital in production, and (iv) the relative productivity of public infrastructure. In deriving these results, the model also identifies conditions under which the predictions of the neoclassical open economy model can be reconciled with empirical regularities, namely the intertemporal relationship between government spending, private consumption, and the real exchange rate.IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;No. 2012/052Foreign exchange ratesFiscal policyGovernment spending policyForeign exchange rates.Fiscal policy.Government spending policy.332.1/52Chatterjee Santanu497920Mursagulov Azer1707808International Monetary Fund.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910827908603321Fiscal Policy and the Real Exchange Rate4096284UNINA