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No. wp2023-4   (Download at EconPapers)
Merike Kukk, Natalia Levenko and Nicolas Reigl
Measuring the effects of borrower-based policies on new housing loans in Estonia
The paper evaluates the outcomes of the borrower-based macroprudential policy measures that were introduced in Estonia in 2015. The core of the analysis is the response of the credit market in 2016–2021 to the upper limit on the debt serviceto-income ratio for new housing loans. The paper employs a novel approach based on the distribution of loan-level data, which allows the analysis to be made using only data from the post-treatment period. The average number of loans affected, meaning those that were rejected or taken in a smaller amount, is estimated to be on average around eleven per cent of the total number of new loans. The total stock of housing loans is on average around 1.7 per cent smaller. The losses in the volume of new loans due to the limit are fairly stable over the years despite the volume of housing loans growing in recent years.
JEL-Codes: G21, G51, E58, D39
Keywords: borrower-based policy measures, debt service-to-income ratio, housing loans, density distributions, extensive and intensive margin
No. wp2023-3   (Download at EconPapers)
Karsten Staehr, Olegs Tkacevs and Katri Urke
Fiscal performance under inflation and inflation surprises: evidence from fiscal reaction functions for the Euro Area
This paper estimates fiscal reaction functions to examine the importance of inflation and inflation surprises for fiscal outcomes in the euro area countries, covering the first 12 countries to join the euro area. The effect of HICP inflation on the primary fiscal balance in per cent of GDP is positive, and statistically and economically significant. The positive effect stems from both the revenue side, particularly direct taxes and indirect taxes, and the expenditure side, particularly primary current expenditures. The effects of HICP inflation on the primary balance and other fiscal outcomes appear in large part to stem from inflation surprises, which are errors in the inflation forecasts available for preparing budgets. The positive effect on the primary fiscal balance does not exhibit noticeable non-linearities.
JEL-Codes: H6, H62, H68, E31
Keywords: public finances; fiscal outcome; inflation; inflation surprises
No. wp2023-2   (Download at EconPapers)
Lukasz Wiktor Olejnik
Economic growth and military expenditure in the countries on NATOʼs Eastern flank in 1999–2021
This paper studies how military expenditure impacted economic growth in nine Central and Eastern European countries in 1999–2021 using a newly created dataset of disaggregated military expenditures. The results of estimating an ARDL growth model with military expenditure confirm that various kinds of military expenditure had a negative and statistically significant influence on economic growth in the longer run, and show that personnel expenditures and labour market adjustments were the most important channel of influence. Equipment purchases and army maintenance also have a negative influence on GDP growth, but that influence is smaller. Fiscal multipliers of military expenditure were estimated using the Local Projections method to measure the short-run effects, and values below unity were obtained. The short-run fiscal multipliers of military expenditure are 0.2–0.5 lower than the fiscal multipliers of non-military government consumption
JEL-Codes: H56, O11
Keywords: military expenditures; military expenditures and economic growth; fiscal multiplier; fiscal adjustments
No. wp2023-1
Karsten Staehr
Economic Growth, Current Account Dynamics and Growth Regimes in the Baltic States
This paper considers the growth performance of the Baltic states from the mid-1990s to 2021. Economic growth was fast before the global financial crisis, but slowed markedly after the crisis. Panel data estimations using seemingly unrelated regressions suggest that the dynamics of the current account balance are important for short and medium-term growth in the Baltic states, but that there is a break signifying a change of growth regime around the time of the global financial crisis. Before the crisis, rapid growth was supported by domestic demand that was made possible by large current account deficits. After the crisis, economic growth was supported by external demand reflected in an improvement of the current account. The shift in the economic growth regime after the global financial crisis has brought lower but also more sustainable growth.
JEL-Codes: F32, F34, O40
Keywords: economic growth, economic convergence, current account balance, global financial crisis