What is it about?

Wagner’s Law is the first model of public spending in the history of public finance. The aim of this study is to assess its empirical evidence in Italy for the period 1960–2008 at a disaggregated level, using a time series approach. After a brief introduction, a survey of the economic literature on this issue is shown, before estimating the specifications of Wagner’s Law for some specific items of public spending (for interests, for final consumption, for labor dependent income, for grants on production, and for public investments), according to the Bank of Italy classification. We found a cointegration relationship for three out of five items. Moreover, results from Granger causality tests show evidence in favor of Wagner’s Law only for passive interests spending in the long-run, and for dependent labor income spending in the short-run. Some notes on the policy implications of our empirical results conclude the paper. Keywords: Public spending; Economic growth; Wagner’s Law; Time series; Unit root; Cointegration; Causality; Fiscal policy

Featured Image

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Wagner versus Keynes: Public spending and national income in Italy, Journal of Policy Modeling, November 2012, Elsevier,
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpolmod.2012.05.012.
You can read the full text:

Read

Resources

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page