ausblenden:
Schlagwörter:
Dynamic inefficiency, fiscal policy, public debt, overlapping-generations models with land, transaction costs, pay-as-you-go retirement provision
JEL:
C15 - Statistical Simulation Methods: General
JEL:
D61 - Allocative Efficiency; Cost–Benefit Analysis
JEL:
E21 - Consumption; Saving; Wealth
JEL:
E62 - Fiscal Policy
JEL:
H63 - Debt; Debt Management; Sovereign Debt
Zusammenfassung:
The paper contributes to the discussion on whether real interest rates smaller than real growth rates can be taken as evidence of dynamic inefficiency that calls for fiscal interventions. A seemingly killing objection points to the presence of land, a non-produced durable asset whose value becomes arbitrarily large as interest rates go to zero. Such an asset, it is claimed, can accommodate any need for a store of value at interest rates above growth rates, so dynamic inefficiency cannot arise. The paper shows that this objection is not robust to the presence of an arbitrarily small per-unit-of-value transaction cost. The paper also gives conditions under which fiscal interventions provide for Pareto improvements even though the interventions themselves are also costly.