Abstract
How do governments react to the accumulation of debt? Do they take corrective measures, or do they let the debt grow? Whereas standard time series tests cannot reject a unit root in the U. S. debt-GDP ratio, this paper provides evidence of corrective action: the U. S. primary surplus is an increasing function of the debt-GDP ratio. The debt-GDP ratio displays mean-reversion if one controls for war-time spending and for cyclical fluctuations. The positive response of the primary surplus to changes in debt also shows that U. S. fiscal policy is satisfying an intertemporal budget constraint.
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CITATION STYLE
Bohn, H. (1998). The behavior of U. S. public debt and deficits. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 113(3), 948–963. https://doi.org/10.1162/003355398555793
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