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Content
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Editorial
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| Interview with Kurt W. Rothschild
(in German) |
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Margit Schratzenstaller:
Steuerwettbewerb in der erweiterten EU (in German)
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Norbert Reuter:
Demografische Entwicklung contra Sozialstaat? Eine ökonomische Potentialanalyse
(in German) |
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Anja Schulz:
Besser als sein Ruf: Der Standort Deutschland und die Rückkehrer (in
German) |
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Dieter Vesper:
Was von der Gemeindefinanzreform übrig blieb (in German) |
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| Vorstellung des BEIGEWUM (in German) |
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| Editorial zum Special Issue
"Finanzpolitik -- internationale Perspektiven" (in German) |
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Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer:
On Fiscal Policy and Budget Deficits |
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Jörg Bibow:
Haushaltskonsolidierungstrategien im Vergleich. Warum die deutsch-europäische
Fiskalpolitik versagt (in German) |
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Jochen Hartwig:
Nichts als Strohfeuer? Eine kritische Analyse des wirtschaftspolitischen
Assignments im "Neuen Konsens" mit Hilfe eines makroökonometrischen
Politiksimulationsmodells der Schweizer Volkswirtschaft (in German) |
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Waltraut Schelkle:
Basic Redress or Incremental Adjustment? On Recent Debates about the Reform
of the Stability and Growth Pact |
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John E. King:
A History of Post Keynesian Economics since 1936
(Engelbert Stockhammer) |
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Michael Heine/Hansjörg Herr:
Die Europäische Zentralbank. Eine Einführung in die Strategie
und Politik der EZB
(Torsten Niechoj) (in German) |
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Abstracts
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Philip Arestis and Malcolm Sawyer
On Fiscal Policy and Budget Deficits
A major argument used against the use of fiscal policy comes from the
view that there are automatic forces within an economic system to ensure
high levels of demand. This paper argues that the case for fiscal policy
in general rests on the proposition that there are no such market forces
that ensure high levels of demand. There is, thus, a need for macroeconomic
policy to perform this task. The argument against fiscal policy to the
effect that it does not raise the level of economic activity, does not
apply when this view of fiscal policy is adopted.
JEL classification: E 62
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Jörg Bibow
Haushaltskonsolidierungsstrategien im Vergleich.Warum die deutsch-europäische
Fiskalpolitik versagt
Th is paper analyses the issues of public finance sustainability and
suitability of strategies aimed at fiscal consolidation, contrasting growth-based
versus thriftbased strategies. Empirically, this study investigates the
experiences with consolidation over the 1990s in the U.S., Japan, and
the eurozone while scrutinizing disparities within Europe. It is argued
that neither Germanys virtuous stabilityoriented past, which in
many ways provided the blueprint for the Maastricht regimes design,
nor any other small economys peculiar record with consolidation
offers any guidance to the EMU today. For that purpose only the case of
the US case may be relevant, featuring cooperative macroeconomic policies
geared at steering domestic demand growth, with sustainable public finances
as a consequence of their success. Reforms should thus focus on securing
cooperation and proper growth orientation in macroeconomic policymaking,
which may be achieved through committing fical and monetary policies to
common goals and a nominal GDP targeting strategy.
JEL classifications: E 58, E 61, E 62, E 63, E 65
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Jochen Hartwig
Nichts als Strohfeuer? Eine kritische Analyse des wirtschaftspolitischen
Assignments im »Neuen Konsens« mit Hilfe eines makroökonometrischen
Politiksimulationsmodells der Schweizer Volkswirtschaft
The paper is concerned with the traditional »assignment«
to be found in many textbooks that holds central bankers responsible for
inflation and inflation only while government politicians
are recommended to care for the short-term stabilisation of the economy
(or not to interfere at all, respectively). Building on monetary and fiscal
policy simulations done with a macroeconometric model of the Swiss economy,
possible long-term real effects of monetary policy are established. Also,
a potential role for fiscal policy in the control of inflation is located.
Since macroeconometric modelling is now widely regarded as being outmoded,
special care is taken to argue that neither the seminal »Lucas critique«
nor more recent time series approaches can be said to have overridden
the traditional approach.
JEL classifications: C 51, C 53, E 17, E 52, E 63
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Waltraud Schelkle
Basic Redress or Incremental Adjustment? On Recent Debates about the Reform
of the Stability and Growth Pact
In a substantive paper, Buti et al. (2003) discuss various criticisms
of the European Stability and Growth Pact and propose a number of amendments.
The bottom line of their review is that reform requires internal adjustment
only, keeping the norm of relying on rule-based fiscal consolidation and
automatic stabilisation. By contrast, I argue that their proposals imply
not merely internal adjustment but a basic redress of the Pact's thrust.
If implemented they would turn the existing disciplinarian device confined
to national budget consolidation into an insurance arrangement for collective
stabilisation. This insurance perspective suggests to go further down
that route to make coordination sustainable.
JEL classication: E 62
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