Abstract
We study optimal policy in an economy in which public debt is used as collateral or liquidity buffer. Issuing more public debt raises welfare by easing the underlying financial friction; but this easing lowers the liquidity premium and increases the government’s cost of borrowing. These considerations, which are absent in the basic Ramsey paradigm, help pin down a unique, long-run level of public debt. They require a front-loaded tax response to government-spending shocks, instead of tax smoothing. And they explain why a financial recession, more than a traditional one, makes government borrowing cheaper, optimally supporting larger fiscal stimuli.
Replaced by
George-Marios Angeletos, Fabrice Collard, and Harris Dellas, “Public Debt as Private Liquidity: Optimal Policy”, Journal of Political Economy, vol. 131, n. 11, November 2023.
Reference
George-Marios Angeletos, Fabrice Collard, and Harris Dellas, “Public Debt as Private Liquidity: Optimal Policy”, TSE Working Paper, n. 11-1170, December 2020.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 11-1170, December 2020