Revisit the Budget Deficits and Inflation: Evidence from Time and Frequency Domain Analyses

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DOI: 10.4236/tel.2015.53041    3,555 Downloads   5,414 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this paper is to test the relationship between budget deficits and inflation for nine EU countries during the period of 1990-2013 using the quarterly data. Recently, the public deficits and inflation have had an increasing importance for developing/emerging and developed countries to build the stability macroeconomic performance in the long run. This study is the first attempt to determine the relationship between the inflation and budget deficits for nine EU countries using different bootstrap causality tests. We employ the bootstrap causality and Granger causality test in the frequency domain analysis which allows us to distinguish short and long-run causality. We do not find a relationship between these variables when we employ bootstrap causality analysis. While the frequency domain causality shows that there is no relationship causality from budget deficits to inflation for all countries, causality from inflation to budget deficits indicates a permanent (long-run) relationship for Belgium, and France.

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Tiwari, A. , Bolat, S. and Koçbulut, Ö. (2015) Revisit the Budget Deficits and Inflation: Evidence from Time and Frequency Domain Analyses. Theoretical Economics Letters, 5, 357-369. doi: 10.4236/tel.2015.53041.

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