skip to content

Faculty of Economics

Journal Cover

Corsetti, G., Kuester, K., Meier, A., and Müller, G. J.

Sovereign Risk, Fiscal Policy, and Macroeconomic Stability

The Economic Journal

Vol. 123(566) pp. F99–F132 (2013)

Abstract: This article analyses the impact of strained government finances on macroeconomic stability and the transmission of fiscal policy. Using a variant of the model by Cúrdia and Woodford (2009), we study a ‘sovereign risk channel’ through which sovereign default risk raises funding costs in the private sector. If monetary policy cannot offset increased credit spreads because it is constrained by the zero lower bound or otherwise, the sovereign risk channel exacerbates indeterminacy problems: private-sector beliefs of a weakening economy may become self-fulfilling. In addition, sovereign risk may amplify the effects of cyclical shocks. Under those conditions, fiscal retrenchment can help curtail the risk of macroeconomic instability and, in extreme cases, even bolster economic activity.

Author links: Giancarlo Corsetti  

Publisher's Link: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ecoj.12013/full



Papers and Publications



Recent Publications


Bhattacharya, D., Dupas, P. and Kanaya, S. Demand and Welfare Analysis in Discrete Choice Models with Social Interactions Review of Economic Studies, accepted [2023]

Huffman, D., Raymond, C. and Shvets, J. Persistent Overconfidence and Biased Memory: Evidence from Managers American Economic Review [2022]

Chen, J., Elliott, M. and Koh, A. Capability Accumulation and Conglomeratization in the Information Age Journal of Economic Theory, accepted [2023]

Aidt, T. S. Review of Forging the Franchise: The Political Origins of the Women's Vote Journal of Economic Literature [2022]