Monday, October 13, 2008

The Shorter The Maturity...And A Stimulus Proposal

Here's a cheery analysis, via Econbrowser:

"So, the fear that we would be dependent upon foreign capital exactly at the time it was hardest to get capital has come to pass, although not exactly in way I expected. Here, it is likely that we can obtain the financing, but at shorter maturities than we would like otherwise. And excessive reliance on short term debt has, in other circumstances, led to vulnerabilities to capital reversals."

How nice. About a stimulus:

"This suggests that supporting already planned investment in infrastructure -- by states and municipalities that are currently liquidity constrained [1], and squeezed by declining tax revenues -- would be a more effective way of supporting aggregate demand than tax cuts (state and local balance on a NIPA basis has decreased by about 1 ppt of GDP since 2006Q1, suggesting that there will be further compression in state and local spending as the balanced budget requirements, credit constraints, and declining tax receipts collide)[2]. That suggests aid to states as a means of fast spending (the argument against discretionary countercyclical fiscal policy is usually that the outside lag is too long)."

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