Fiscal sustainability: Must the problem be diminished before we can see it?
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Date
2007Metadata
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Abstract
Abstract:
Assessments of fiscal sustainability (FS) problems should be based on present values of government
revenues and expenditures over an infinite horizon. The paper shows that realistic assumptions
imply that the growth rate of government expenditure components may exceed both the steady state
growth rate of the economy and the relevant discount rate, which makes the FS problem
immeasurably large. The common practice of ad hoc exogenous alignment of government
expenditures to the steady state growth path after some distant year may significantly diminish the
FS problem, since the effective discounting is likely to remain low. Low effective discounting also
makes the FS assessment highly non-robust, reducing its political relevance. It suggests that the
fiscal sustainability should be improved by reducing the growth rates of government expenditures, a
strategy followed in e.g. the Swedish pension reform.
Keywords: Fiscal sustainability, long run projections, discounting