Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP8037
Authors: Giuseppe Bertola
Abstract: This paper explores the empirical relevance of public debt accumulation for labor market institutions and outcomes. In theory, since debt service obligations act as a constraint on policy choices, past debt accumulation and current interest rates should influence reform incentives and labor market performance. Empirically, employment and unemployment rates are strongly associated with debt stock and debt service indicators over five-year periods along 1980-2000 public debt and interest-rate stabilization cycles. Significant and sensible relationships are apparent between debt service, interacted with country-specific policy indicators, and labor market policy changes. While only further data and research may disentangle the force that jointly shape public finance and labor market developments, past evidence suggests that aggregate fiscal policy reactions to the 2008-09 crisis will have persistent labor market implications.
Keywords: debt sustainability; inequality; labor market regulations
JEL Codes: H60; J08
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
public debt (H63) | labor taxes (J39) |
labor taxes (J39) | employment rates (J68) |
public debt (H63) | employment rates (J68) |
generous unemployment insurance (J65) | unemployment rates (J64) |
public debt (H63) | labor market policies (J48) |