1. General government purchase of goods and services

More government purchase increases the demand for private output. Consequently, private-sector employment rises in the short run. In the long run, there is no effect on private-sector employment. In the following, the public expenditure is increased permanently by 0.1 percent of GDP relative to the baseline in 2010 prices.(See experiment)

 

Table 1. The effect of a permanent increase in general government spending

    1. yr 2. yr 3. yr 4. yr 5. yr 10. yr 15. yr 20. yr 25. yr 30. yr
    Million 2010-Dkr.
Priv. consumption fCp 51 341 485 540 575 770 1045 1270 1390 1436
Pub. consumption fCo 1767 1805 1835 1865 1896 2053 2219 2395 2583 2785
Investment fI 600 1007 716 538 491 307 266 283 285 274
Export fE -67 -143 -239 -358 -497 -1365 -2179 -2716 -2984 -3084
Import fM 851 1125 1005 924 911 813 758 737 739 772
GDP fY 1507 1895 1806 1681 1581 1014 686 607 660 770
    1000 Persons
Employment Q 1,10 1,68 1,82 1,82 1,75 0,87 0,10 -0,24 -0,31 -0,24
Unemployment Ul -0,59 -0,87 -0,92 -0,91 -0,88 -0,43 -0,05 0,12 0,15 0,12
    Percent of GDP
Pub. budget balance Tfn_o/Y -0,06 -0,05 -0,05 -0,05 -0,06 -0,10 -0,13 -0,15 -0,17 -0,18
Priv. saving surplus Tfn_hc/Y 0,01 -0,02 -0,02 -0,01 -0,01 0,00 0,01 0,00 0,00 0,00
Balance of payments Enl/Y -0,05 -0,07 -0,07 -0,07 -0,07 -0,09 -0,12 -0,15 -0,17 -0,19
Foreign receivables Wnnb_e/Y -0,10 -0,20 -0,28 -0,35 -0,43 -0,81 -1,24 -1,72 -2,22 -2,71
Bond debt Wbd_os_z/Y 0,03 0,06 0,10 0,15 0,20 0,52 0,94 1,41 1,87 2,32
    Percent
Capital intensity fKn/fX -0,11 -0,11 -0,10 -0,08 -0,07 -0,02 0,01 0,02 0,02 0,02
Labour intensity hq/fX -0,08 -0,07 -0,06 -0,05 -0,05 -0,04 -0,04 -0,05 -0,05 -0,05
User cost uim 0,00 0,01 0,03 0,04 0,05 0,11 0,14 0,14 0,14 0,13
Wage lna 0,01 0,04 0,07 0,10 0,14 0,26 0,30 0,29 0,27 0,24
Consumption price pcp 0,00 0,01 0,02 0,04 0,05 0,11 0,14 0,15 0,14 0,14
Terms of trade bpe 0,00 0,01 0,02 0,02 0,03 0,07 0,08 0,08 0,08 0,07
    Percentage-point
Consumption ratio bcp -0,04 -0,02 -0,01 0,00 0,00 0,00 0,01 0,02 0,02 0,02
Wage share byw -0,02 -0,01 0,01 0,02 0,03 0,05 0,05 0,04 0,03 0,02

(See details)

 

The immediate effect of an increase in government purchase of goods and services is that total demand rises. The increased demand is met partly through domestic production and partly through imports. The expansion in domestic economic activity raises private sector employment and lowers unemployment. The lower unemployment rate pushes prices and wages upward and reduces competitiveness. The lower competitiveness makes the market share of exports fall and the market share of imports rise, which reduces the positive effect on domestic production. Eventually, the effect on employment disappears and employment returns to its baseline. The long run effect on unemployment is also zero reflecting that the permanent increase in wages and prices deteriorates competitiveness and crowds out any impact on employment. This is the wage-driven crowding out process in ADAM.

 

The short run effect is closely related with the Keynesian income multiplier. The income multiplier refers to the final change in income as compared to the injection of capital deposits or investments which originally fueled the growth. It is usually used as a measurement of the effects of government spending on income. In the present experiment, the income multiplier can be seen as the ratio between the effects on final demand and the change in government purchase of goods and services. In a closed economy, the multiplier for domestic demand is larger than one because the exogenous increase in government purchase of goods and services creates additional domestic demand in the form of more private investment and larger private consumption. However, the ADAM multiplier for GDP remains less than one because higher demand triggers not only GDP but also imports, see ADAM book for further discussion.

 

Wages and domestic prices increase in the medium and long run. But not equally. Prices adjust gradually to total production costs, which includes more than wages. Imported goods and services are for instance part of production costs. As the prices of imported goods are unchanged, prices increase less than wages. This results in a permanent positive effect on real wages, real income and private consumption. The long-term macro-consumption function in ADAM relates consumption to income and wealth and ensures that private consumption, real income and real wealth attain the same growth rate in the long run. Whenever real wages and real disposable income change permanently, private consumption changes, henceforth referred as a real wage effect.

 

The real wage effect also translates into a long-run effect on the terms of trade. In the new equilibrium employment returns to its baseline while wages and prices increase permanently, which results in a permanent change in the long-run terms of trade.

 

The composition of GDP changes permanently towards higher public and private consumption and lower net exports relative to the baseline. That is, the composition of aggregate demand shifts from exports toward domestic consumption and investment and the composition of aggregate supply shifts from domestic production to imports.  

 

The experiment also creates a permanent change in the distribution of income. There is a permanent increase in the wage share defined as the share of value added which is payed out to workers. This is because wages have increased permanently higher than capital costs or more appropriately user costs. The effect on user costs is smaller because interest rates are fixed and investment prices change less than wages.

 

The consumption equation stabilizes the saving surplus of the private sector in the long run. Thus the private sector saving surplus returns to its baseline. In contrast, the government budget balance and the balance of payments become negative in the long run. This reflects the absence of an automatic fiscal reaction. If the higher public consumptions are financed, for example, by higher income taxes, there would be no permanent positive effect on private consumption, for a balanced budget experiment see section 18.

 

Figure 1. The effect of a permanent increase in general government spending

 

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