Abstract

What is the effect of government spending on consumption? Neoclassical and new Keynesian models deliver opposing predictions and empirical studies differ in their conclusions. This paper takes a data-driven approach and exploits information from over 200 variables via a Bayesian factor-augmented VAR model. I use sign restrictions for identifying effects that both classes of models agree upon. This approach imposes a minimal set of restrictions on the empirical model, leaving the sign and magnitude of the effect of government spending on consumption free to be determined by the data. I find that: (i) government spending increases aggregate consumption; (ii) the estimated spending multiplier is close to 2; (iii) there exists heterogeneity even within durable, nondurable, and service consumption variables which is undocumented in the literature. Finally, I show that my identified structural shocks are not predictable by economic agents and are uncorrelated with traditional monetary policy shocks, suggesting that these effects are not confounded by monetary policy.

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