Annual Conference

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International Macroeconomics, Money & Banking

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May 2016

Fiscal Conditions and Long-term Interest Rates

We conduct a quantitative analysis of the effects of fiscal conditions and other factors on nominal long-term interest rates based on panel data of 23 member states of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) for the period from 1980 to 2013. In addition to labor productivity, the demographic factor, and inflation rates, our analysis shows that the fiscal balance, national burden ratio, and current account balance (= domestic savings) influence nominal long-term interest rates. The elasticity of nominal long-term interest rates to the fiscal balance vary, depending on the levels of government debt outstanding, which are thought to affect perceptions of fiscal sustainability in the future. This implies that the elasticity of nominal long-term interest rates to the fiscal balance is non-linear depending on the levels of government debt outstanding. We also find that a low national burden ratio nurtures future expectations of fiscal consolidation and thus keeps long-term interest rates at low levels. Furthermore, non-traditional monetary policy measures and the preference for safe assets in recent years are found to keep nominal long-term interest rates at low levels
Keywords: Long-term interest rate, Fiscal balance, Debt outstanding, Current account, National burden ratio, Fiscal reconstruction, monetary policy
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