政府的账目和流行病

J. Jalles
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引用次数: 1

摘要

早期证据表明,2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)导致全球财政账户急剧恶化。本文经验性地评估了以往流行病和流行病的财政影响。本研究利用2000年至2018年170个国家的大样本,采用jordado(2005)的地方预测方法,追踪流行病对若干财政总量的中短期动态影响。研究结果本文表明,与最近观察到的COVID-19类似的(定性)反应是以往大流行影响的特征。尽管财政效应在经济上和统计上都很显著,而且持续存在,但各不相同;在发达经济体,流行病对政府支出的影响大于对收入的影响,而发展中国家则相反。作者还发现,不对称反应取决于一个国家是长期财政盈余型还是赤字型。造成财政反应不对称的另一个因素是,当大流行冲击袭来时,经济正处于商业周期的主要阶段。研究局限性/意义本文的研究结果提供了当前COVID-19大流行对各国财政状况造成影响的下限。话虽如此,本文中使用的一系列大流行和流行病在地理上更为集中,并不像最近的COVID-19那样以系统和同步的方式影响所有国家。原创性/价值这是第一篇探讨这类与健康相关的冲击的财政方面的论文,因为大多数文献都集中在更传统的宏观经济效应上。
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Governments' accounts and pandemics
PurposeEarly evidence suggests that coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused a sharp deterioration in fiscal accounts worldwide. This paper empirically assesses the fiscal impact of previous pandemics and epidemics.Design/methodology/approachUsing a large sample of 170 countries from 2000 to 2018, this study relies on Jordà's (2005) local projection method to trace pandemics' short- to medium-term dynamic impact on several fiscal aggregates.FindingsThis paper shows that (qualitatively) similar responses to those observed more recently with COVID-19 have characterized the effects of previous pandemics. While the fiscal effect has been economically and statistically significant and persistent, it varies; pandemics affect government expenditures more strongly than revenues in advanced economies, while the converse applies to developing countries. The author also finds that asymmetric responses depend on whether a country is characterized as a chronic fiscal surplus or deficit type. Another factor that generates an asymmetric fiscal response is the prevailing phase of the business cycle the economy was in when the pandemic shock hits.Research limitations/implicationsThis paper's findings provide a lower bound to what the current COVID-19 pandemic will inflict on countries’ fiscal situation. That said, the set of pandemics and epidemics used in this paper are geographically more concentrated and did not affect all countries in such a systemic and synchronized manner as did COVID-19 more recently.Originality/valueThis is the first paper to explore the fiscal side of this type of health-related shocks, as most of the literature has focused on the more traditional macroeconomic effects.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
10 weeks
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