By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
0

Is fiscal policy poised for a comeback?

Bookmarks
Article

Krugman, Paul R.

Oxford Review of Economic Policy

2005

21

4

Winter

515-523

fiscal policy ; monetary policy

Japan ; USA

Public finance and taxation

https://academic.oup.com/oxrep/issue

English

Bibliogr.

"For several decades, discretionary fiscal policy has been in disrepute. Most economists viewed it as unnecessary, because monetary policy was up to the job of stabilizing the economy. Economists also viewed fiscal policy as too clumsy to deal with the relatively short recessions that became the post-war norm. But the experience of Japan and the near-Japan experience of the United States in 2001–3 have renewed some of the old case for fiscal policy. Low-interest environments in which monetary policy becomes ineffective turn out to be a real danger, not a myth. Economic slumps that last for a number of years, offering ample time to implement fiscal expansion, also turn out to be possible. As a result, the case for fiscal policy made by the first generation of Keynesians has experienced a real revival."

Digital



Bookmarks