Abstrakt: |
In recent years, fiscal policy in the Eurozone (EZ) has faced challenges posed by the strong and rapid increase in inflation as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic and other geo-political crises. Due to the fear of "fiscal inflation" present during episodes of fiscal stimulus during the pandemic crisis, this paper assesses the relationship between discretionary fiscal policy and inflation in developed EZ economies, taking into consideration the rise in energy prices as a control variable. This study considers the econometric framework of heterogeneous, non-stationary panels (Pooled Mean Group (PMG) and Common Correlated Effects Mean Group (CCEMG) estimators). Using quarterly panel data for the period 2015q1–2024q1, the results show that, in the long run, the effects of fiscal policy on inflation are insignificant. However, covering only the pandemic and other geo-political crises (2020q1–2024q1), research shows a significant negative long-run relationship between fiscal expenditure and inflation and heterogeneous short-run fiscal adjustments due to the lack of a fiscal union in the EU economies. Hence, accompanied by monetary policy, the discretionary response of fiscal policy to inflationary shock was oriented in the same direction—the reduction in inflationary pressures during a geo-political crisis. Fiscal policy mitigated inflationary pressures in these recent crises, while in the long run, it did not affect nominal variables, indicating that there is no evidence of fiscal inflation in the sample of EZ economies during a stabilization period or under crisis conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |