Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper investigates the macroeconomic consequences of an alternative fiscal rule in the context of commodity price shocks for a commodity-exporting country. We build a DSGE model to explain the business cycle in an oil-exporting economy, estimated using macroeconomic data from Kazakhstan. Our results demonstrate that when fiscal policy is procyclical in response to a transitory negative oil price shock, and if a majority of households are non-Ricardian, then a one standard deviation drop in oil prices causes an output decline of about 0.19%. In contrast, if the fiscal policy is countercyclical and conducted according to the structural balance fiscal rule, output increases by about 0.13% in response to the same shock. We also report that countercyclical fiscal policy is robustly effective when the monetary policy is characterized by its active inflation stabilization framework.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have