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Andrew Hughes Hallett
George Mason University and University of St Andrews
United States
Moritz Kuhn
University of Bonn
Germany
Thomas Warmedinger
European Central Bank
Germany
Biography
Vol. 1 No. 1 (2012), Articles, pages 44-65
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17979/ejge.2012.1.1.4276
Submitted: Sep 24, 2018 Published: Jun 30, 2012
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Abstract

The use of real-time cash data allows us to make accurate intra-annual forecasts of an economy’s fiscal position, and to issue early warning signals for the need to correct fiscal imbalances. This paper shows how those signals can be used to design the necessary fiscal corrections, and discusses the gains that can be achieved from such interventions. Examples from Germany and Italy show that large corrections are often necessary early on to make adjustments later on acceptable and to keep debt ratios from escalating. There is a credibility issue here; we find the difference between front-loaded and back-loaded adjustment schemes is likely to be vital for the time consistency of fiscal policymaking. We also show that, without early interventions, the later deficit reductions typically double in size – meaning governments become subject to the excessive deficit procedure and significant improve-ment tests more often. Thus the budget savings from early intervention and the use of cash data are significant; in our examples they are similar in size to the operating budget of the department of housing and urban development in Germany. Similar results apply in other Eurozone countries.

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