Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem

This study re-examines the Ricardian Equivalence theorem (RET) by using advanced time series econometric models to investigate updated data of the U.S. budget deficits and real interest rates. We employ a multi-model approach to thoroughly investigate the properties of two time series, namely the U....

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Main Author: Tuan Van Nguyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Danubius University 2013-10-01
Series:Acta Universitatis Danubius: Oeconomica
Subjects:
VAR
Online Access:http://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/oeconomica/article/view/1965/1907
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spelling doaj-47466551dd314fe9971e3f2724b0a9112020-11-25T00:35:35ZengDanubius UniversityActa Universitatis Danubius: Oeconomica2065-01752067-340X2013-10-019586102Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence TheoremTuan Van NguyenThis study re-examines the Ricardian Equivalence theorem (RET) by using advanced time series econometric models to investigate updated data of the U.S. budget deficits and real interest rates. We employ a multi-model approach to thoroughly investigate the properties of two time series, namely the U.S. federal budget deficits (BDEF) and real interest rates (INTRATE) for the study period from 1798 to 2009. It is found that BDEF and INTRATE are I(0) processes. The AR (2) is the most appropriate model for the BDEF series, while the ARMA (3,2) is the proper model for the INTRATE series. The estimated VAR (2) model, comprising the two stationary series BDEF and INTRATE, implies that the BDEF series has no effect on the INTRATE series. The Granger-causality test also shows that there is no direction of causality from the BDEF series to the INTRATE series. Our findings are consistent with what the Ricardian Equivalence theorem predicts and, therefore, support the proposition that the budget deficits are neutral. This study significantly contributes to the extant literature of the relationship between the budget deficits and the real interest rates by applying the multi-model approach. Furthermore, our long time series dataset enables us to make reliable inferences.http://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/oeconomica/article/view/1965/1907ARMAVARRicardian Equivalence TheoremBudget DeficitsInterest Rates
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tuan Van Nguyen
spellingShingle Tuan Van Nguyen
Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
Acta Universitatis Danubius: Oeconomica
ARMA
VAR
Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
Budget Deficits
Interest Rates
author_facet Tuan Van Nguyen
author_sort Tuan Van Nguyen
title Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
title_short Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
title_full Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
title_fullStr Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
title_full_unstemmed Do Budget Deficits Affect Real Interest Rates? A Test of Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
title_sort do budget deficits affect real interest rates? a test of ricardian equivalence theorem
publisher Danubius University
series Acta Universitatis Danubius: Oeconomica
issn 2065-0175
2067-340X
publishDate 2013-10-01
description This study re-examines the Ricardian Equivalence theorem (RET) by using advanced time series econometric models to investigate updated data of the U.S. budget deficits and real interest rates. We employ a multi-model approach to thoroughly investigate the properties of two time series, namely the U.S. federal budget deficits (BDEF) and real interest rates (INTRATE) for the study period from 1798 to 2009. It is found that BDEF and INTRATE are I(0) processes. The AR (2) is the most appropriate model for the BDEF series, while the ARMA (3,2) is the proper model for the INTRATE series. The estimated VAR (2) model, comprising the two stationary series BDEF and INTRATE, implies that the BDEF series has no effect on the INTRATE series. The Granger-causality test also shows that there is no direction of causality from the BDEF series to the INTRATE series. Our findings are consistent with what the Ricardian Equivalence theorem predicts and, therefore, support the proposition that the budget deficits are neutral. This study significantly contributes to the extant literature of the relationship between the budget deficits and the real interest rates by applying the multi-model approach. Furthermore, our long time series dataset enables us to make reliable inferences.
topic ARMA
VAR
Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
Budget Deficits
Interest Rates
url http://journals.univ-danubius.ro/index.php/oeconomica/article/view/1965/1907
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