Pages that link to "Item:Q4806763"
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The following pages link to An Empirical Characterization of the Dynamic Effects of Changes in Government Spending and Taxes on Output (Q4806763):
Displaying 50 items.
- Fiscal consolidation in a currency union: spending cuts vs. tax hikes (Q311120) (← links)
- Exchange rate regimes and fiscal multipliers (Q311124) (← links)
- Fiscal stimulus and labor market policies in Europe (Q318354) (← links)
- Dynamics of fiscal financing in the United States (Q530949) (← links)
- Fiscal stimulus and the role of wage rigidity (Q631248) (← links)
- Monetary, fiscal and oil shocks: evidence based on mixed frequency structural FAVARs (Q726590) (← links)
- Faster fiscal stimulus and a higher government spending multiplier in China: mixed-frequency identification with SVAR (Q824011) (← links)
- Beggar thy neighbor? The transmission of fiscal shocks from the US to Canada (Q836024) (← links)
- The stabilizing role of government size (Q844598) (← links)
- New Keynesian explanations of cyclical movements in aggregate inflation and regional inflation differentials (Q850630) (← links)
- New Keynesian versus old Keynesian government spending multipliers (Q975903) (← links)
- Temporal aggregation and SVAR identification, with an application to fiscal policy (Q1046293) (← links)
- Can government spending increase private consumption? the role of complementarity (Q1046350) (← links)
- Fiscal shocks and their consequences. (Q1427499) (← links)
- Monetary and fiscal policy under deep habits (Q1624032) (← links)
- Fiscal stimulus and systematic monetary policy: postwar evidence for the United States (Q1626995) (← links)
- Nonlinear effects of fiscal policy over the business cycle (Q1655563) (← links)
- The government wage bill and private activity (Q1655579) (← links)
- Asymmetric effects of exogenous tax changes (Q1655737) (← links)
- Capital taxation and government debt policy with public discounting (Q1655774) (← links)
- Fiscal consolidations and heterogeneous expectations (Q1657192) (← links)
- The age-specific burdens of short-run fluctuations in government spending (Q1657304) (← links)
- Firm dynamics and the origins of aggregate fluctuations (Q1657554) (← links)
- Government debt, learning and the term structure (Q1657598) (← links)
- Debt and stabilization policy: evidence from a Euro area FAVAR (Q1657627) (← links)
- Fiscal policy interventions at the zero lower bound (Q1657650) (← links)
- Immigration and public finances in OECD countries (Q1734612) (← links)
- Priors about observables in vector autoregressions (Q1740294) (← links)
- Can fiscal spending stimulate private consumption? (Q1927420) (← links)
- Tentative evidence of tax foresight (Q1934092) (← links)
- Externality in labor supply and government spending (Q1942931) (← links)
- Fiscal deficits and current account deficits (Q1994141) (← links)
- Fiscal news and macroeconomic volatility (Q1994184) (← links)
- Fiscal policy in good and bad times (Q1994192) (← links)
- How important is fiscal policy cooperation in a currency union? (Q1994318) (← links)
- Structural evolution of the postwar U.S. economy (Q1994526) (← links)
- The effects of public spending externalities (Q1994628) (← links)
- Covid-19 fiscal support and its effectiveness (Q2043140) (← links)
- International fiscal-financial spillovers: the effect of fiscal shocks on cross-border bank lending (Q2047007) (← links)
- Public investment multipliers: evidence from stock returns of the road pavement industry in Japan (Q2054832) (← links)
- Keeping up with the Joneses and the consumption response to government spending (Q2096218) (← links)
- How do income and the debt position of households propagate fiscal stimulus into consumption? (Q2097978) (← links)
- Identification of structural VAR models via independent component analysis: a performance evaluation study (Q2102887) (← links)
- How do fiscal adjustments work? An empirical investigation (Q2136951) (← links)
- Do we reject restrictions identifying fiscal shocks? Identification based on non-Gaussian innovations (Q2136973) (← links)
- Are government spending shocks inflationary at the zero lower bound? New evidence from daily data (Q2152324) (← links)
- Legislative tax announcements and GDP: evidence from the United States, Germany, and the United Kingdom (Q2158666) (← links)
- Economic policy uncertainty and government spending multipliers (Q2159847) (← links)
- Twin deficits in developing economies (Q2179724) (← links)
- Government spending and heterogeneous consumption dynamics (Q2191456) (← links)