Talk:Fiscal multiplier

Latest comment: 6 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

Bias

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This article immediately strikes me as biased. Already in the introduction it concludes that "multiplier values less than one have been empirically measured" and later it the more in depth section, estimates that have concluded higher multipliers for example with relation to 1.5% for the US stimulus according to Berkeley's Christina Romer, go unmentioned with a focus on skeptical data on the multiplier effect. I would say some estimates may be too high, but any strong article should make sure it quotes all this evidence too.

Uhh...no. There is actually quite a bit of debate over the size of the multiplier and it being less than one (also, multipliers aren't in percentage terms. They are in terms like 1, 1.25, 1.5, .75, ect.). I don't have the time to go get a source at the moment, but a quick reading into Chicago school economics will reveal that many monetarists hold that it is less than one. The major bias I saw was at the end with an obviously tacked on sentence "Immediately after the stimulus bill took effect, job loss slowed and private sector job growth resumed in 2010 and has continued through 2012." For starters, it is giving the reader the impression that the fiscal multiplier is really high by suggesting the stimulus was a grand success, but fails to mention that the job growth has been incredibly sluggish and far below that of job growth following past recessions, it simply gives the reader a false impression. Also, it gives the impression that the spending multiplier is really high, but there's no way of possibly knowing that yet. We (1) aren't that great at calculating it to begin with, and (2)usually, time needs to elapse before you can even calculate it. I recommend removing the last sentence.

Harry Potter and the Magic Multiplier

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the multiplier is a big myth, it is built on entirely unfounded premises, ignores opportunity cost and by the estimates of keynesian economists themselves (see Bryant, Holtham and Hooper)using their own models drops to <1 after 2 years. Not to mention that nobody has actually measured it in real life. Even if we believed (yes faith is required in the absence of empirical evidence) that the logic behind the multiplier works, the effect of the negative multiplier when S is reduced makes it meaningless as far as policy implications go. The other irony is that the multiplier is often used to justify govt. intervention, and yet the keynesians own studies strongly suggest that there is a larger multiplier for private investment than for government spenditure. Funny ain't it?

-Also, don't forget that if consumers spend all of their income, then the multiplier will be infinite. As Murray Rothbard said, "Sure beats working!"


The problem with increasing aggregate demand is inflation. The above should be analysed with this in mind.Lost-n-translation (talk) —Preceding undated comment added 18:56, 13 August 2011 (UTC).Reply

Criticism of the Multiplier effect

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I think that the criticisms of this theory should be included in this article too. What do you think?


of course, like any hypothesis or theory, it cannot be presented as fact. Including some reference to contradictory theories and criticism is necessary. --Flix2000 19:47, 13 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

The article states that "certain schools of laissez-faire which embrace Say's Law and deny the possibility of... under-employment of resources..." This is not strictly correct, but I'm having trouble re-wording it. These schools of laissez-faire do NOT deny the possibility of under-employment of resources, but I'm not really happy with just changing it to "under-employment of resources in equilibrium" or "persistent under-employment". Any suggestions? Even if consumers spend all their income the multiplier would never be infinite. At every economic transaction taxes are levied and represent a sink that in the end totals the original investment on one side, and on the other side prevent the multiplier (more correctly the original investment) from becoming infinite. That is why any investment by the government will sooner or later recovered in form of taxes. Solipso52 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.222.96.62 (talk) 02:43, 13 January 2008 (UTC)Reply


- for an excellent summary of the fallacy of the Keynesian Spending multiplier see http://www.mises.org/books/dissent.pdf, pp. 77-79 (essay by Jeffrey Herbener)

The best bit: The multiplier (k) equals 1/1-MPC, and thus, he concluded, "it tells us that, when there is an increment of aggregate investment, income will increase by an amount which is k times the increment of investment" (ibid, [emphasis added]). To use k in support of "public works," the multiplier must have the mathematical precision Keynes gives it (ibid.: 116). Yet this precision leads to logical absurdities. Three absurd cases exist, corresponding to three violations of Keynes's pronouncement that 0 < MPC < 1. As shown above, there is no accounting principle that the MPC be bound in this way, and there is ample evidence that the MPC is not so bound (see Table 4.1). One absurdity exists when the MPC = 1 since, in this case, k is infinitely large. Thus, any additional expenditure on "public works" would end scarcity! Keynes tried to avoid this absurdity by claiming that "prices will rise without limit" (ibid.: 117). This was nothing but a rhetorical trick since Keynes had defined his theory in real terms (wage-units). If prices are important in his equations, then he should put them in and explain their role in the multiplier process. Keynes could not do that because his entire theory falls apart as soon as changing relative prices are recognized (Hazlitt [1959] 1973: 288- 318). Even more damaging is the case where the MPC exceeds one (see Table 4.1). In this case, the multiplier is negative!7 But Keynes claimed that more spending always means more prosperity, not less. The final case is no less absurd. If the MPC is negative (see Table 4.1), then k will be a positive fraction. Thus, an increase in spending for "public works" gets partially consumed somewhere in the aggregate economy. But Keynes claimed that failure to spend leads to recession. His formula does not concur, nor can it be reconciled with his verbal pronouncements. Keynesians cannot have it both ways: either they must give up mathematical precision (rendering the theory null) or they must reconcile these absurdities with general economic theory (not possible).

Should parts of this be included??

Don't forget the Multiplier is about short term effects; the Accelerator is the long term equivalent.

The MPC (for a country) is an AVERAGE or composite MPC for all the individuals (people or businesses) involved at each stage, and is never going to reach 1 as VAT, duties or other purchase (or sales) taxes reduce the actual income at many of the stages. However, as you will see from the main article, it is possible for individuals to have an MPC higher than 1, but as the money "goes round" the overall MPC is less than 1. If a business borrows to fund investment (and thus apparently having an MPC greater than 1) on the back of increased income, then this is really the Accelerator effect, rather than the Multiplier; and of course, expenditure on investment takes place over a long period, whereas the Multiplier is about a short term effect. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Peter Judge (talkcontribs) 09:22, 24 August 2010 (UTC)Reply


20000miles (talk) 02:19, 7 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

good job.. someone spelled arugment wrong

The name of this article should be Multiplier Effect.

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I don't know why multiplier effect goes anywhere else. This is what it is supposed to be. Carlitos (talk) 20:56, 12 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

No, a fiscal multiplier is a particular kind of multiplier. There are several different multiplier effects. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 161.253.11.22 (talk) 19:33, 23 January 2013 (UTC)Reply

The topic is treated in a very muddled way. 20000miles (talk) 02:27, 7 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Derivation

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Show Derivation would be nicer. Jackzhp (talk) 21:48, 20 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Name change

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The current article covers both the spending multiplier and tax multipliers. Together these are "fiscal multipliers," so I think we should change the page name to cover both. At this point, there's not enough material to make pages for both spending and tax multipliers, so splitting the article doesn't seem like a good solution. I would go ahead and move the article, but fiscal multiplier is a redirect to this page, so, assuming there's no opposition to the move, I'll get an admin to do the move.--Bkwillwm (talk) 05:04, 4 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

  Administrator note Moved.--Aervanath (talk) 13:59, 31 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Definition shortcomings

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The terms ΔY, ΔK and I in the equation in the Definition section are not defined. Without any definition of the terms, the equation is pretty much useless. Unfortunately, I don't know the definition, so I cannot expand on it. --Dolda2000 (talk) 02:15, 17 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

The definition, as it stood, was completely incoherent, so I moved it. In general, fiscal multipliers and other sorts of multipliers refer to the ratio ΔY/ΔX, where Y is a macroeconomic aggregate (frequently GDP) and X is some exogenous (unexplained) quantity of spending. Sometimes X represents private-sector consumption, and then the multiplier refers to what happens to the rest of the economy if for some reason consumption rises. More frequently, it refers to an increase in government spending. Unfortunately, depending on the theory under discussion, exactly what is being held fixed and what is being allowed to vary when calculating the ratio ΔY/ΔX, may be completely different. --Rinconsoleao (talk) 14:45, 1 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

Should separate the general analysis from the Keynesian analysis

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This page is hard to follow, and the topic is hard to define precisely, because the term 'fiscal multiplier' is used in very different types of economic models and theories. It would be helpful to give a general definition of the meaning of the term, and then have a large subsection on the meaning of the term in Keynesian economics.

In general, a fiscal multiplier refers to how much some endogenous macroeconomic variable (such as GDP) responds to an exogenous change in some fiscal variable (such as government spending). There are many possible combinations of endogenous and exogenous variables one might want to analyze, so there are many possible multiplier formulas (as this page makes clear). This is the usual meaning of 'multiplier' in economics, and in a static model it is derived by comparative statics analysis. In a dynamic model there are still more possible meanings: it may refer to the immediate impact of the exogenous variable on the exogenous variable, or the long run impact, or also on some medium run impacts; the general topic forms part of impulse reponse analysis.

However, the fiscal multiplier is most closely associated with Keynesian theory (most nonspecialists only hear about 'fiscal multipliers' in some Keynes-related chapter of a macroeconomics textbook), and Keynesians have defined the concept in a somewhat nonstandard way. Often it refers to the change in GDP in response to some fiscal variable in the Keynesian cross diagram. In that case, it (usually) represents the effect of the fiscal variable on GDP holding fixed interest rates and investment and many other variables. The total effect in the Keynesian cross diagram can also be interpreted as how much the IS curve shifts right in the IS-LM diagram. These Keynesian interpretations are actually what the formulas on this page refer to.

How all this stuff fits into macroeconomic theory would be much clearer if the page attempted to separate the concept of a fiscal multiplier in general from the Keynesian concept of a fiscal multiplier. Alternatively, this page could be moved to Keynesian multiplier or Keynesian fiscal multiplier. --Rinconsoleao (talk) 14:59, 1 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

A classic reference: Marianne Baxter and Robert King (1993), 'Fiscal policy in general equilibrium'. American Economic Review 83 (3), pp. 315-334.

A recent summary: A. Spilimbergo, S. Symansky, and M. Schindler (2009), 'Fiscal multipliers'. IMF Staff Papers SPN/09/11.

Another summary: Christophe Kamps (2004), The Dynamic Macroeconomic Effects of Public Capital: Theory and Evidence for OECD Countries. Springer, ISBN 3540238972. --Rinconsoleao (talk) 08:07, 2 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

Dr. Calitz's comment on this article

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Dr. Calitz has reviewed this Wikipedia page, and provided us with the following comments to improve its quality:


No amendments to suggest


We hope Wikipedians on this talk page can take advantage of these comments and improve the quality of the article accordingly.

We believe Dr. Calitz has expertise on the topic of this article, since he has published relevant scholarly research:


  • Reference : Estian Calitz & Krige Siebrits & Ian Stuart, 2013. "Enhancing the credibility of fiscal forecasts in South Africa: Is a fiscal council the only way?," Working Papers 25/2013, Stellenbosch University, Department of Economics.

ExpertIdeasBot (talk) 15:52, 24 August 2016 (UTC)Reply

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