Fiscal Multipliers, Monetary Efficacy, and Hand-to-Mouth Households

Fei Guo*, Isabel Kit-Ming Yan, Tao Chen, Chun-Tien Hu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The effectiveness of fiscal and monetary policy has been found to exhibit large heterogeneity across countries, and it hinges heavily on households’ marginal propensity to consume (MPC) in response to the policy shocks. This paper examines the role of households’ liquidity, saving, and credit constraints as microfactors that underpin households’ MPC and hence affect the macro level fiscal and monetary policy effectiveness.
This paper presents a uniform framework to measure the degree of various constraints faced by consumers, and employs data from 20 European countries to examine their nexus with hand-to-mouth (HtM) households. Our findings demonstrate that (i) a higher ratio of HtM households generally enhances fiscal multipliers; in particular, the size of tax multipliers is enhanced by the wealthy-HtM ratio (HtM households that hold positive illiquid wealth), whereas the size of fiscal spending multipliers is enhanced by the poor-HtM ratio (households that hold no illiquid wealth); (ii) monetary efficacy is higher in countries with larger HtM ratios, especially those with higher wealthy-HtM ratios; (iii) sole liquidity-constrained HtM households (type-I HtM households) enhance the efficacy of fiscal and monetary policies, but triple constrained HtM households (type-II HtM households that are liquidity-, saving-, and credit-constrained) do not enhance the efficacy, or even do the opposite. The triple constrained case is true especially for the monetary efficacy due to the dampening effect of the credit constraint. This paper contributes to the literature by providing evidence for the heterogeneous impacts of liquidity vs. saving and credit constrained HtM households, and wealthy- vs. poor-HtM households on fiscal and monetary efficacy.
Original languageEnglish
Article number102743
JournalJournal of International Money and Finance
Volume130
Online published13 Sept 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2023

Funding

We thank Prof. Greg Kaplan for sharing the codes in calculating the hand-to-mouth ratio. Fei Guo acknowledges financial supports of the Young Scientists Fund of National Natural Science Foundation of China (7220031137), the Start-up Research Grant for Introduced Talents (0000/030900002218) from Ningxia University, and financial supports of the Economics First-class Research Field Project of Ningxia (award number: NXYLXK2017B04). Tao Chen acknowledges financial supports of Multi-Year Research Grant (MYRG2020-00042-FBA) from the University of Macau. Kit-Ming Isabel Yan acknowledges support from the Strategic Research Grant (project no. 7004995), General Research Fund (project no. 9043088) and the Global Research Unit (GRU) of the City University of Hong Kong.

Research Keywords

  • Liquidity Constraint
  • Saving Constraint
  • Fiscal Multiplier
  • Monetary Efficacy
  • Hand-to-Mouth Households

RGC Funding Information

  • RGC-funded

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