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Quarterly Journal of Economics

Quarterly (February, May, August, November)
400 pp. per issue, 6 x 9
Founded: 1886
ISSN 0033-5533
E-ISSN 1531-4650
2008 ISI Impact Factor: 5.048


Quarterly Journal of Economics

November 2006, Vol. 121, No. 4, Pages 1167-1210
Posted Online December 5, 2006.
(doi:10.1162/qjec.121.4.1167)
Copyright by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Politics and Efficiency of Separating Capital and Ordinary Government Budgets*

Marco Bassetto

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, University of Minnesota, and NBER

Thomas J. Sargent

New York University and Hoover Institution

PDF (167.508 KB) PDF Plus (177.486 KB)

Abstract

We analyze a “golden rule” that separates capital and ordinary account budgets and allows a government to finance only capital items with debt. Many national governments followed this rule in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and most U. S. states do today. We study an overlapping-generations economy where majorities choose durable and nondurable public goods in each period. When demographics imply even moderate departures from Ricardian equivalence, the golden rule substantially improves efficiency. Examples calibrated to U. S. demographics show greater improvements at the state level or with nineteenth century demographics than under current national demographics.

Cited by

Marco Battaglini, Stephen Coate. (2008) A Dynamic Theory of Public Spending, Taxation, and Debt. American Economic Review 98:1, 201-236
Online publication date: 1-Apr-2008.
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