Abstract

The British data from the early 1700s through WWI provide an unmatched opportunity for studying temporary changes in government purchases. Temporary increases, which appeared mainly as wartime spending, raised long-term interest rates, but significantly increased the growth rates of money and prices only during suspensions of the gold standard (1797–1821 and 1914–1918). Temporary changes in military spending accounted for the bulk of budget deficits; over the sample of more than 200 years, I found only two major non-war deficits — one associated with compensation payments to slaveowners in 1835–1936 and the other with a dispute over the income tax in 1909–1910. Interest rates did not react much to these ‘exogenous’ deficits.

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