GOVERNMENT BORROWING AND THE LONG- TERM INTEREST RATE: APPLICATION OF AN EXTENDED LOANABLE FUNDS MODEL TO THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC

Similar documents
Volume 29, Issue 3. Application of the monetary policy function to output fluctuations in Bangladesh

Is Currency Depreciation or More Government Debt Expansionary? The Case of Thailand

Test of an Inverted J-Shape Hypothesis between the Expected Real Exchange Rate and Real Output: The Case of Ireland. Yu Hsing 1

Is Currency Depreciation Expansionary? The Case of South Korea

Effects of the Euro Exchange Rate and Government Debt on Greece s Aggregate Output

An Investigation into the Impact of Federal Government Budget Deficits on the Ex Ante Real Interest Rate Yield on Treasury Notes in the U.S.

Currency Substitution, Capital Mobility and Functional Forms of Money Demand in Pakistan

Is Real Depreciation or More Government Deficit Expansionary? The Case of Slovenia

Budget Deficits and Economic Growth

Recent evidence on the impact of federal budget deficits on the nominal cost of long term borrowing for private enterprise in the U.S.

Response of Output Fluctuations in Costa Rica to Exchange Rate Movements and Global Economic Conditions and Policy Implications

Does External Debt Increase Net Private Wealth? The Relative Impact of Domestic versus External Debt on the US Demand for Money

Impact of Fed s Credit Easing on the Value of U.S. Dollar

RECENTLY, CHANGES IN two major macroeconomic variables have caught the

IMPACTS OF MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES ON THE STOCK MARKET INDEX IN POLAND: NEW EVIDENCE

IMPACTS OF MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES ON THE STOCK MARKET IN BULGARIA AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS

Relationship between Oil Price, Exchange Rates and Stock Market: An Empirical study of Indian stock market

Government Tax Revenue, Expenditure, and Debt in Sri Lanka : A Vector Autoregressive Model Analysis

LAMPIRAN. Lampiran I

Determinants of Merchandise Export Performance in Sri Lanka

Outward FDI and Total Factor Productivity: Evidence from Germany

IS REAL DEPRECIATION OR MORE GOVERNMENT DEBT CONTRACTIONARY? THE CASE OF ROMANIA

IMPACT OF MACROECONOMIC VARIABLE ON STOCK MARKET RETURN AND ITS VOLATILITY

The effect of Money Supply and Inflation rate on the Performance of National Stock Exchange

A SIMULTANEOUS-EQUATION MODEL OF THE DETERMINANTS OF THE THAI BAHT/U.S. DOLLAR EXCHANGE RATE

Long-run Stability of Demand for Money in China with Consideration of Bilateral Currency Substitution

Economics Bulletin, 2013, Vol. 33 No. 3 pp

Relationship between Inflation and Unemployment in India: Vector Error Correction Model Approach

AN ANALYSIS OF THE RELATIONSHIP OF INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT TO THE GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP) IN ZIMBABWE

Inflation Regimes and Monetary Policy Surprises in the EU

Foreign direct investment and profit outflows: a causality analysis for the Brazilian economy. Abstract

Impact of FDI and Net Trade on GDP of India Using Cointegration approach

Impact of Federal Government Budget Deficits on the Longer-term Real Interest Rate in the U.S.: Evidence Using Annual and Quarterly Data,

Ricardo-Barro Equivalence Theorem and the Positive Fiscal Policy in China Xiao-huan LIU 1,a,*, Su-yu LV 2,b

Munich Personal RePEc Archive. Richard Cebula. Jacksonville University. 12. May 2014

Monetary Sector Analysis of Bangladesh- Causality and Weak Exogeneity

Spending for Growth: An Empirical Evidence of Thailand

The Short and Long-Run Implications of Budget Deficit on Economic Growth in Nigeria ( )

Factor Affecting Yields for Treasury Bills In Pakistan?

Volume 29, Issue 2. Measuring the external risk in the United Kingdom. Estela Sáenz University of Zaragoza

Influence of Macroeconomic Indicators on Mutual Funds Market in India

Effects of External Debt on National Savings in Botswana

Anexos. Pruebas de estacionariedad. Null Hypothesis: TES has a unit root Exogenous: Constant Lag Length: 0 (Automatic - based on SIC, maxlag=9)

THE EFFECTIVENESS OF EXCHANGE RATE CHANNEL OF MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION MECHANISM IN SRI LANKA

Demand for Money in China with Currency Substitution: Evidence from the Recent Data

A Threshold Multivariate Model to Explain Fiscal Multipliers with Government Debt

Structural Cointegration Analysis of Private and Public Investment

Does the Unemployment Invariance Hypothesis Hold for Canada?

AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF THE PUBLIC DEBT RELEVANCE TO THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE USA

Long Run Money Neutrality: The Case of Guatemala

INTERDEPENDENCE OF THE BANKING SECTOR AND THE REAL SECTOR: EVIDENCE FROM OECD COUNTRIES

International evidence of tax smoothing in a panel of industrial countries

Economics & Economy, Vol. 1, No. 1 (March, 2013), 7-16 IMPACTS OF MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES ON THE STOCK MARKET IN SLOVAKIA AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS

Quarterly Journal of Econometrics Research

CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT AND FISCAL DEFICIT A CASE STUDY OF INDIA

Chapter 2 Macroeconomic Analysis and Parametric Control of Equilibrium States in National Economic Markets

The Yield Curve as a Predictor of Economic Activity the Case of the EU- 15

Volume 35, Issue 1. Yu Hsing Southeastern Louisiana University

Institute of Economic Research Working Papers. No. 63/2017. Short-Run Elasticity of Substitution Error Correction Model

Jacek Prokop a, *, Ewa Baranowska-Prokop b

Assist. Prof. Dr. Nuray İslatince 1

PRIVATE AND GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT: A STUDY OF THREE OECD COUNTRIES. MEHDI S. MONADJEMI AND HYEONSEUNG HUH* University of New South Wales

THE IMPACT OF FDI, EXPORT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, TOTAL FIXED INVESTMENT ON UNEMPLOYMENT IN TURKEY. Ismail AKTAR Latif OZTURK Nedret DEMIRCI

On the Determination of Interest Rates in General and Partial Equilibrium Analysis

AFRREV IJAH, Vol.3 (1) January, 2014

Test of the bank lending channel: The case of Hungary

Equity Price Dynamics Before and After the Introduction of the Euro: A Note*

The source of real and nominal exchange rate fluctuations in Thailand: Real shock or nominal shock

THE IMPACT OF IMPORT ON INFLATION IN NAMIBIA

Does Exchange Rate Volatility Influence the Balancing Item in Japan? An Empirical Note. Tuck Cheong Tang

Unemployment and Labour Force Participation in Italy

ESTIMATING MONEY DEMAND FUNCTION OF BANGLADESH

The Relative Effectiveness of Monetary and Fiscal Policies on Economic Growth in Bangladesh

Impact of Some Selected Macroeconomic Variables (Money Supply and Deposit Interest Rate) on Share Prices: A Study of Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE)

Deviations from Optimal Corporate Cash Holdings and the Valuation from a Shareholder s Perspective

Impact of Total, Internal and External Government Debt on Interest Rate in Pakistan

The Impact of Tax Policies on Economic Growth: Evidence from Asian Economies

A causal relationship between foreign direct investment, economic growth and export for Central and Eastern Europe Zuzana Gallová 1

Scholars Journal of Economics, Business and Management e-issn

A case study of Cointegration relationship between Tax Revenue and Foreign Direct Investment: Evidence from Sri Lanka

The Demand for Money in Mexico i

Determinants of Revenue Generation Capacity in the Economy of Pakistan

Estimating Persistent Overvaluation of Real Exchange Rate : A Case of Pakistan. Dr Rizwanul Hassan/Ghazenfar Inam

Asian Economic and Financial Review TEST OF THE BANK LENDING CHANNEL FOR A BRICS COUNTRY. Yu Hsing. Wen-jen Hsieh

MONEY, PRICES AND THE EXCHANGE RATE: EVIDENCE FROM FOUR OECD COUNTRIES

Threshold Analysis of Fiscal Deficits with Respect to Monetary Growth: Evidence from Nigeria

Determinants of Stock Prices in Ghana

Comparative analysis of monetary and fiscal Policy: a case study of Pakistan

The Effect of the Internet on Economic Growth: Evidence from Cross-Country Panel Data

GDP, Share Prices, and Share Returns: Australian and New Zealand Evidence

The Economic Consequences of Dollar Appreciation for US Manufacturing Investment: A Time-Series Analysis

A joint Initiative of Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität and Ifo Institute for Economic Research

The differing effects of pre- and post-1981 federal budget deficits on tax-adjusted real interest rates

Asian Economic and Financial Review MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION AND BANK LENDING IN SOUTH KOREA AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS. Yu Hsing

ESTIMATING MONEY DEMAND FOR GHANA Victor Osei Research Department, Bank of Ghana

Public Expenditure on Capital Formation and Private Sector Productivity Growth: Evidence

The Effect of Technological Progress on Economic Growth

NOTES and COMMENTS. Ricardian Equivalence and the Irish Consumption Function: The Evidence Re-examined I INTRODUCTION

Most recent studies of long-term interest rates have emphasized term

An Empirical Study about Catering Theory of Dividends: The Proof from Chinese Stock Market

Transcription:

ECONOMIC ANNALS, Volume LV, No. 184 / January March 2010 UDC: 3.33 ISSN: 0013-3264 Scientific Papers Yu Hsing* DOI:10.2298/EKA1084058H GOVERNMENT BORROWING AND THE LONG- TERM INTEREST RATE: APPLICATION OF AN EXTENDED LOANABLE FUNDS MODEL TO THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC ABSTRACT: Extending the open-economy loanable funds model, this paper finds that more government borrowing as a percent of GDP leads to a higher government bond yield, that a higher real money market rate, a higher expected inflation rate, a higher EU government bond yield, or a decrease in the Slovak nominal effective exchange rate would increase the Slovak government bond yield, and that the positive coefficient of the percent change in real GDP is insignificant at the 10% level. When the standard closedeconomy or open-economy loanable funds model is considered, except that the positive coefficient of the ratio of the net capital inflow to GDP is insignificant at the 10% level, other results are similar. KEY WORDS: Government borrowing, long-term interest rate, expected inflation, world interest rate, exchange rate JEL CLASSIFICATION: E43, E62, P35 * Professor of Economics, Southeastern Louisiana University, USA. yhsing@selu.edu 58

Government Borrowing and the Long-Term Interest Rate 1. INTRODUCTION The recent global recession has led many countries to experience declining economic activities and government budget concerns. The Slovak Republic is no exception. According to the National Bank of Slovakia and the Economic and Financial Data for Slovak Republic published by the International Monetary Fund, Slovakia s real GDP at the 2000 price declined 5.32% from 12,486.89 million euros in 2008.Q2 to 11,822.5 million euros in 2009.Q2. The government budget changed from a surplus of 142.7 million euros in 2008.Q3 to a deficit of 1,108.4 million euros in 2009.Q2. Total debt of the Slovak central government rose 25.46% from 16,023 million euros in 2008.Q2 to 20,103 million euros in 2009. Q2. There has been a renewed interest in examining whether more government deficit or borrowing would raise the long-term interest rate, crowd out some of private investment expenditures, and hinder economic growth. Previous studies suggest that more government deficit may or may not lead to a higher interest rate. Feldstein (1982), Hoelscher (1986), Wachtel and Young (1987), Zahid (1988), Thomas and Abderrozak (1988), Miller and Russek (1991), Raynold (1994), Cebula (1989, 1991, 1993, 1997, 1999, 2003), Vamvoukas (1997), Ewing and Yanochik (1999), and Saleh and Harvie (2005) hold the view that there is a positive impact of the government deficit on the interest rate. Kormendi (1983), Hoelscher (1983), Aschauer (1985), Makin (1983), McMillin (1986), Barro (1987), Evans (1985, 1987, 1988), Gupta (1989), Darrat (1989, 1990), Findlay (1990), and Ostrosky (1990) maintain the Ricardian equivalence view that more government deficit would not raise the interest rate. Several recent articles have examined the subject. Hartman (2007) indicates that government deficits may affect interest rates differently due to the short-term crowding-in effect and the long-term crowding-out effect and that current real interest rates are also influenced by expected government deficits. Barnes (2008) reveals that cointegrating relationships are confirmed for ten Western countries under study and that long-term interest rates respond positively to government budget deficits. Wang and Rettenmaier (2008) show that the government deficits have positive and temporary effects on interest rates. This paper attempts to examine the impact of the government deficit on the longterm interest rate for the Slovak Republic and has several different aspects. First, the model is extended to incorporate the world interest rate and the exchange rate as potential variables explaining the behaviour of international capital flows in supplying loanable funds. Second, comparative-static analysis is applied 59

Economic Annals, Volume LV, No. 184 / January March 2010 to determine the theoretical sign of a change in the exogenous variable on the equilibrium long-term interest rate. Third, the latest available data are employed in empirical work, and the results would have more policy implications. The paper is organized in the following manner. The theoretical model is presented in the next section. Data sources, the definition and measurement of variables, and empirical results are described and analyzed in the third section. The summary and conclusions are made in the last section. 2. THE MODEL The loanable funds model has been employed in studying the impact of government deficits on interest rates (Hoelscher, 1986; Tran and Sawhney, 1988; Thomas and Abderrezak, 1988; Cebula, 1988, 1994, 1997a, 1997b, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005; Correia-Nunes and Stemitsiotis, 1995; García and Ramajo, 2004; Quayes and Jamal, 2007; Barnes, 2008). Hoelscher (1986) develops a closed-economy loanable funds model, and Cebula (1988, 1994, 1997a, 1997b, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003) proposes an open-economy loanable funds model by considering the net capital inflow in the supply of loanable funds. In this paper, the behaviour of the net capital inflow is explained by the relative interest rate and the exchange rate (Devereux and Saito, 2006; De Santis and Luhrmann, 2009). As the world long-term interest rate rises relative to the Slovak long-term interest rate, the net capital inflow to Slovakia would decrease. As the Slovak currency appreciates relative to other currencies, the net capital inflow to Slovakia would increase. Hence, a higher world interest rate would shift the supply of loanable funds to the left and increase the Slovak long-term interest rate, and an appreciation of the Slovak currency would shift the supply of loanable funds to the right and reduce the Slovak long-term interest rate. Suppose the demand for loanable funds is negatively affected by the long-term interest rate and positively influenced by the real short-term interest rate, the expected inflation rate, the percent change in real GDP, and the government deficit and that the supply of loanable funds is positively associated with the long-term interest rate, the percent change in real GDP, and the nominal effective exchange rate and negatively associated with the real short-term interest rate, the expected inflation rate, and the world long-term interest rate. Thus, in the extended open-economy loanable funds model, the demand for and the supply of loanable funds can be expressed as 60

Government Borrowing and the Long-Term Interest Rate D = F(R, R S, π e, Y, B) (1) S = H(R, R S, π e, Y, R*, ε) (2) where D = the demand for loanable funds in Slovakia, S = the supply of loanable funds in Slovakia, R = the long-term interest rate in Slovakia, R S = the real short-term interest rate in Slovakia, π e = the expected inflation rate in Slovakia, Y = percent change in real GDP in Slovakia, B = the government deficit in Slovakia, R* = the world long-term interest rate, and ε = the nominal effective exchange rate. (An increase means appreciation of the Slovak currency.) Setting D and S equal to the equilibrium loanable funds, we can write the equilibrium long-term interest rate as R = R(B, R S, Y, π e, R*, ε) (3) The partial derivative of R with respect to each of the exogenous variables is given by where J is the Jacobian for the endogenous variables and has a positive value. Note that the sign of H R S, H π e and H R * is negative and that the sign of H ε is positive. Theoretically, the equilibrium long-term interest rate has a positive relationship (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) 61

Economic Annals, Volume LV, No. 184 / January March 2010 with the government deficit, the real short-term interest rate, the expected inflation rate, or the world interest rate, a negative relationship with the nominal effective exchange rate, and an unclear relationship with the percent change in real GDP. In comparison, the equilibrium long-term interest rate in the standard closedeconomy loanable funds model (Hoelscher, 1986) can be written as The equilibrium long-term interest rate in the standard open-economy loanable funds model (Cebula, 1988, 1994, 1997a, 1997b, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003) is given by where NCF is the net capital inflow. The sign of NCF should be negative as an increase in the net capital inflow to Slovakia would shift the supply of loanable funds to the right and reduce the equilibrium long-term interest rate. (10) (11) 3. EMPIRICAL RESULTS The data were collected from the October 2009 edition of the International Financial Statistics, which is published by the International Monetary Fund. The dependent variable is Slovakia s government bond yield. Because the data for the government deficit are only available during 2006.Q1 2007.Q4 with 8 observations, B is represented by the ratio of government borrowing to GDP. Due to incomplete data for the Treasury bill rate, the real short-term interest rate is represented by the real money market rate to test a potential substitution effect. Y is represented by the percent change in real GDP at the 2005 price. The expected inflation rate is represented by the lagged inflation rate based on the consumer price index. To reduce multicollinearity, the lagged EU government bond yield is chosen to represent the world interest rate. ε is represented by the nominal effective exchange rate. An increase in the nominal effective exchange rate means appreciation of the Slovak currency. NCF is represented by the ratio of the net capital inflow to GDP where the net capital inflow is the sum of the portfolio, direct and other investments in the financial account. The data for the government bond yield before 2000.Q3 and the data for the money market rate 62

Government Borrowing and the Long-Term Interest Rate after 2008.Q4 are not available. Hence, the sample ranges from 2000.Q3 to 2008. Q4. As shown in Table 1, based on the unrestricted cointegration rank test, there are 2 cointegrating relations. Therefore, there is a long-term stable relationship among the variables. Table 1. Unrestricted Cointegration Rank Test (Maximum Eigenvalue) Hypothesized Max-Eigen 0.05 No. of CE(s) Eigenvalue Statistic Critical Value Prob.** None * 0.920727 81.11551 46.23142 0.0000 At most 1 * 0.715977 40.27837 40.07757 0.0475 At most 2 0.605054 29.72820 33.87687 0.1446 At most 3 0.504136 22.44650 27.58434 0.1984 At most 4 0.295154 11.19285 21.13162 0.6280 At most 5 0.228419 8.298043 14.26460 0.3492 At most 6 0.028020 0.909452 3.841466 0.3403 Notes: Max-eigenvalue test indicates 2 cointegrating relations at the 5% level. * denotes rejection of the hypothesis at the 0.05 level **MacKinnon-Haug-Michelis (1999) p-values Table 2 plots the residual histogram and presents the normality test for the error terms. As shown, the Jarque-Bera statistic of 4.01 is smaller than the critical value of 9.21 at the 1% level or 5.99 at the 5% level. Hence, the null hypothesis of a normal distribution of the error terms cannot be rejected. Table 3 reports the estimated regression and related statistics. The Newey-West generalized least squares (GLS) method is employed in order to yield consistent estimates for the covariance and standard errors. As shown, 91.5% of the variation in the government bond yield can be explained by the right-hand side variables with significant coefficients. Except for the coefficient of the growth rate of real GDP, all other coefficients are significant at the 1% or 5% level. The government bond yield is positively associated with the ratio of government borrowing to GDP, the real money market rate, the expected inflation rate, the EU government bond yield, and it is negatively affected by the nominal effective exchange rate. 63

Economic Annals, Volume LV, No. 184 / January March 2010 Table 2. The Jargue-Bera Normality Test of the Regression Residuals Table 3. Estimated Regression of the Government Bond Yield for Slovakia based on the Extended Loanable Funds Model Variable Coefficient Std. Error t-statistic Prob. C -0.822985 0.776459-1.059920 0.2986 B 1.602431 0.673581 2.378974 0.0247 R S 0.232864 0.072405 3.216114 0.0034 Y 0.009744 0.012127 0.803528 0.4287 π e 0.979523 0.337383 2.903296 0.0073 R* 1.479321 0.276401 5.352087 0.0000 ε -0.017698 0.006003-2.948262 0.0065 R-squared 0.930380 Adjusted R-squared 0.914909 Akaike inform. criterion 1.477811 Schwarz criterion 1.792062 F-statistic 60.13645 Prob (F-statistic) 0.000000 Sample period 2000.Q3 2008.Q4 N 34 Notes: C is the constant. B is the ratio of government borrowing to GDP. R S is the real money market rate. Y is the percent change in real GDP. π e is the expected inflation rate. R* is the EU government bond yield. ε is the nominal effective exchange rate. 64

Government Borrowing and the Long-Term Interest Rate Several different versions are considered to determine whether the outcomes may vary. If the 10-year U.S. government bond yield replaces the EU government bond yield, its positive coefficient will be significant at the 5% level, the positive coefficient of the nominal effective exchange rate will be insignificant, and other results will be similar. If the lagged nominal effective exchange rate replaces the nominal effective exchange rate, its negative coefficient is significant at the 10% level, and other results are similar. If the SKK/USD exchange rate replaces the nominal effective exchange rate, its positive coefficient will be significant at the 1% level, but the coefficients of the ratio of government borrowing to GDP, the real money market rate, and the expected inflation rate will be insignificant at the 10% level. To save space, details are not printed here and will be available upon request. When the standard closed-economy loanable funds model in equation (10) is considered in empirical work, the value of the adjusted R 2 is 0.845, and the sign and significance of all the coefficients are similar to those reported in Table 3. When the standard open-economy loanable funds model in equation (11) is considered, the value of the adjusted R-squared is 0.830, the positive coefficient of the ratio of the net capital inflow to GDP is insignificant at the 10% level, and other results are similar to the closed-economy loanable funds model. Hence, the inclusion of the EU government bond yield and the nominal effective exchange rate increases the value of adjusted R-squared of the regression and improves the explanatory power of the behaviour of the Slovak government bond yield. 4. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS This paper has applied an extended open-economy loanable funds model to examine whether the Slovak long-term interest rate would be affected by government borrowing and other selected macroeconomic variables. The results show that more government borrowing would raise the government bond yield and that a higher real money market rate, a higher expected inflation rate, a higher EU government bond yield, and a lower nominal effective exchange rate would raise the Slovak government bond yield. In the standard closed-economy loanable funds model without including the EU government bond and the nominal effective exchange rate, similar results for other variables are found. In the standard open-economy loanable funds model, except that the positive coefficient of the ratio of the net capital inflow to GDP is insignificant at the 10% level, other results are similar to those found in the standard closed-economy loanable funds model. Hence, the EU government bond yield and the nominal 65

Economic Annals, Volume LV, No. 184 / January March 2010 effective exchange rate incorporated in this study increase the explanatory power of the behaviour of the government bond yield. There are several policy implications. The significant coefficient of the ratio of government borrowing to GDP implies that pursing expansionary fiscal policy to stimulate the economy would raise the long-term government bond yield and crowd out part of private investment expenditures. It suggests that the multiplier effect of increased government deficit spending would not change much due to crowding-out. In the open-economy loanable funds model, the world interest rate and the exchange rate need to be considered as international investors search for better returns in determining the supply of loanable funds to Slovakia or other countries. The positive insignificant coefficient of the net capital inflow to GDP suggests that its role in affecting the supply of loanable funds may need to be further examined. Empirical results in this article should be regarded as preliminary. When more observations become available, regression parameters need to be re-estimated to determine whether the results would be robust. The expected inflation rate may be estimated by other techniques. Interest rate determination may be examined by other theories (Romer, 2000). REFERENCES Aschauer, D. A. (1989), Does public capital crowd out private capital? Journal of Monetary Economics, Volume 25, pp. 171 188. Barnes, B. J. (2008), A Cointegrating approach to budget deficits and long-term interest rates, Applied Economics, Volume 40, pp. 127-133. Barro, R. J. (1974), Are government bonds net wealth? Journal of Political Economy, Volume 82, pp. 1095 1117. Barro, R. J. (1987), Government spending, interest rates, prices, and budget deficits in the United Kingdom, 1701-1918, Journal of Monetary Economics, Volume 20, pp. 221-247. Barro, R. (1989), The Ricardian approach to budget deficits, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 3, pp. 37 54. 66

Government Borrowing and the Long-Term Interest Rate Barth, J. R., G. R. Iden and F. S. Russek (1984), Do federal budget deficits really matter? Contemporary Policy Issues, Volume 3, pp. 79 95. Barth, J. R., G. R. Iden and F. S. Russek (1985), Federal borrowing and short-term interest rates: comment, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 52, pp. 554 559. Bovenberg, A. L. (1988), Long-term interest rates in the US, International Monetary Fund Staff Papers, Volume 35, pp. 382 390. Cebula, R. J. (1988), Federal government budget deficits and interest rates: an analysis for the United States 1955 1984, Public Finance, Volume 43, pp. 337 348. Cebula, R. J. (1991), A note on federal budget deficits and the term structure of real interest rates in the United States, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 57, pp. 1170 1173. Cebula, R. J. (1997), The impact of net international capital flows on nominal long-term interest rates in France, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 25, pp. 179 190. Cebula, R. J. (1998), Budget deficits and long-term interest rates: 1973 1991, International Advances in Economic Research, Volume 4, pp. 374 388. Cebula, R. J. (1999), Budget deficits, capital flows, and long-term interest rates: cointegration findings for the UK, International Advances in Economic Research, Volume 5, pp. 374 388. Cebula, R. J. (2003), Budget deficits and interest rates in Germany, International-Advance in Economic Research, Volume 9, pp. 64 68. Cebula, R. J. and W. J. Belton (1993), Government budget deficits and interest rates in the United States: evidence for closed and open systems put into perspective, 1955-1989, Public Finance, Volume 48, pp. 188-209. Cebula, R. J. and J. V. Koch (1989), An empirical note on deficits, interest rates, and international capital flows, Quarterly Review of Economics and Business, Volume 29, pp. 121 127. Cebula, R. J. and I. S. Saltz (1992), Central government budget deficits and ex ante real long-term interest rates in the United Kingdom: an empirical note, International Review of Economics and Business, Volume 39, pp. 479 484. Darrat, A. F. (1989), Fiscal deficits and long-term interest rates: further evidence from annual data, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 56, pp. 363 373. Darrat, A. F. (1990), Structural federal deficits and interest rates: some causality and cointegration tests, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 56, pp. 752 759. De Santis, R. A. and M. Luhrmann (2009), On the determinants of net international portfolio flows: a global perspective, Journal of International Money and Finance, Volume 28, pp. 880-901. 67

Economic Annals, Volume LV, No. 184 / January March 2010 Devereux, M. B. and M. Saito (2006), A portfolio theory of international capital flows, CEPR Discussion Papers: 5746. Evans. P. (1985), Do large deficits produce high interest rates? American Economic Review, Volume 75, pp. 68-87. Evans, P. (1987), Do budget deficits raise nominal interest rates? Evidence from six countries, Journal of Monetary Economics, Volume 20, pp. 281 300. Evans. P. (1988), Are government bonds net wealth? Evidence for the United States, Economic Inquiry, Volume 26, pp. 551-566. Ewing, B. T. and M. A. Yanochik (1999), Budget deficits and the term structure of interest rates in Italy, Applied Economics Letters, Volume 6, pp. 199 201. Feldstein, M. (1982), Government deficits and aggregate demand, Journal of Monetary Economics, Volume 9, pp. 1-20. Findlay, D. W. (1990), Budget deficits, expected inflation and short-term real interest rates: evidence for the US, International Economic Journal, Volume 4, pp. 41 53. Gupta, K. L. (1989), Budget deficits and interest rates in the US, Public Choice, Volume 60, pp. 87 92. Hartman, H. C. (2007), Deficit-related explanations for the US interest rate conundrum, Applied Economics Letters, Volume 14, pp. 261-265. Hoelscher, G. (1983), Federal borrowing and short-term interest rates, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 50, pp. 319 333. Hoelscher, G. (1986), New evidence on deficits and interest rates, Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, Volume 18, pp. 1 17. Johansen, S. (1988), Statistical analysis of cointegration vectors, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Volume 12, pp. 231 254. Kormendi, R. C. (1983), Government debt, government spending, and private sector behaviour, American Economic Review, Volume 73, pp. 994 1010. Makin, J. H. (1983), Real interest, money surprises, anticipated inflation and fiscal deficits, Review of Economics and Statistics, Volume 65, pp. 374-384. McMillan, W. D. (1986), Federal deficits and short-term interest rates, Journal of Macroeconomics, Volume 8, pp. 403 422. 68

Government Borrowing and the Long-Term Interest Rate Miller. S. M., and F. S. Russek, Jr. (1991), The temporal causality between fiscal deficits and interest rates, Contemporary Policy Issues, Volume 9, pp. 12-23. Newey, W. K., and K. D. West (1987), A simple, positive semi-definite, heteroskedasticity and autocorrelation consistent covariance matrix, Econometrica, Volume 55, pp. 703-708. Ostrosky, A. L. (1990), Federal government budget deficits and interest rates: comment, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 56, pp. 802-803. Raynold, P. (1994), The impact of government deficits when credit markets are imperfect: evidence from the interwar period, Journal of Macroeconomics, Volume 16, pp. 55-76. Romer, D. (2000), Keynesian macroeconomics without the LM curve, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 14, pp. 149-160. Saleh, A. S. and C. Harvie (2005), The budget deficit and economic performance: a survey, Singapore Economic Review, Volume 50, pp. 211-243. Thomas Jr. L. B. and A. Abderrezak (1988), Long-term interest rates: the role of expected budget deficits, Public Finance Quarterly, Volume 1, pp. 341 356. Tran, D. T. and B. L. Sawhney (1988), Government deficits, capital flows, and interest rates, Applied Economics, Volume 20, pp. 753 765. Vamvoukas, G. A. (1997), A note on budget deficits and interest rates: evidence from a small, open economy, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 63, pp. 803 811. Wachtel, P. and J. Young (1987), Deficit announcements and interest rates, American Economic Review, Volume 5, pp. 1007 1012. Wang, Z. and A. J. Rettenmaier (2008), Deficits, explicit debt, implicit debt, and interest rates: some empirical evidence, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 75, pp. 208-222. Zahid, K. H. (1988) Government budget deficits and interest rates: the evidence since 1971 using alternate deficit measures, Southern Economic Journal, Volume 3, pp. 725 731. Received: January 10, 2010 Accepted: March 17, 2010 69