Abstract

BackgroundOne of the principal goals of monetary policy pursued by Central Banks worldwide is virtually price stability. Understanding inflationary dispositions and its determinants is therefore a critical issue from the monetary authorities, scholars and the policy makers viewpoint. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the budget deficit and inflation nexus for Uganda for the period 1980–2016. This is because budget deficit in Uganda has been one of the top topical issues of concern in the country’s historical economic problems. The study employs the cointegration and error correction model (ECM) as well as the pairwise Granger causality. This is because the ECM technique has become a tool of choice for estimation and testing the multivariate relationships among the non-stationary data in much of the time series macro-econometrics.ResultsResults of the Granger causality test show that budget deficit Granger causes inflation in Uganda at a conventional level of significance. However, no feedback effect is observed. The cointegration results reveal a positive and statistically significant long-run relationship between the series, and the results of the ECM reveal that budget deficit causes inflation in Uganda only in the short run. Further, in Uganda, budget deficit affects inflation directly and indirectly through fluctuations in the nominal exchange rate and money supply.ConclusionsThe main conclusion from this analysis is the existence of the long-run relationship among inflation, budget deficit and money supply. This was thus an indication of Granger causality in at least one direction among the variables. However, the impact of trade balance and exchange rate were taken as exogenous. A long-run stationary relationship between the budget deficit, money supply, inflation, trade balance and the exchange rate has been found to hold for Uganda. The major implications for this study are that inflation in Uganda is caused by both monetary as well as fiscal factors. A comprehensive policy package involving budgetary, monetary as well as exchange rate policies is required to deal with inflation.

Highlights

  • One of the principal goals of monetary policy pursued by Central Banks virtually in the entire world is price stability (Ekanayake 2013)

  • This means that the budget deficit, inflation, nominal exchange rate (NER), trade balance and money supply are non-stationary since the The Augmented Dickey Fuller unit root test (ADF) and the Phillips Perron test (PP) statistics are statistically insignificant even at 10% level of significance

  • It is consistent with the hypothesis that increases in the budget deficits are associated with increases in seigniorage in the long run

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Summary

Introduction

One of the principal goals of monetary policy pursued by Central Banks virtually in the entire world is price stability (Ekanayake 2013). Understanding inflationary dispositions and its determinants is a critical issue and attracts interest from policy makers and the monetary authorities. Budget deficit is studied for Uganda because theoretically it could be a source of inflation especially with regard to how it is financed. In both the Keynesian and Monetarist frameworks, deficits tend to be inflationary. One of the principal goals of monetary policy pursued by Central Banks worldwide is virtually price stability. Understanding inflationary dispositions and its determinants is a critical issue from the monetary authorities, scholars and the policy makers viewpoint. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the budget deficit and inflation nexus for Uganda for the period 1980–2016. This is because the ECM technique has become a tool of choice for estimation and testing the multivariate relationships among the non-stationary data in much of the time series macro-econometrics

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