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Asymmetric interaction between government spending and terms of trade volatility: New evidence from hidden cointegration technique

Abdulnasser Hatemi‐J (Department of Economics and Finance, UAE University, Al Ain, United Arab Emirates)
Manuchehr Irandoust (Department of Economics and Finance, UAE University, Al Ain, United Arab Emirates)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 27 July 2012

796

Abstract

Purpose

In the literature on the effects of economic globalization, the compensation hypothesis suggests that there is a positive link between government size and external risk as governments perform a risk mitigating role to insure against productivity shocks through transfers. In contrast, the conventional wisdom hypothesis states that more openness will lower tax rates and lead to smaller government due to increased international factor mobility which undermines the ability of governments to tax. The purpose of this paper is to test the literature and present the authors' conclusions.

Design/methodology/approach

Using time series data for the USA, Canada, Japan and Australia over the period 1960‐2008, the authors test the asymmetric relationship between government size and terms‐of‐trade volatility by applying multivariate hidden cointegration analysis.

Findings

The findings show that high terms of trade volatility are positively related to government spending in the all sample countries. The effect is stronger in the case of positive movements than negative ones.

Practical implications

The policy implication is that the size of the public sector might play a risk‐reducing role in economies with significant amounts of external risk. In particular, public expenditure is considered to be an important fiscal policy instrument when terms of trade volatility are high.

Originality/value

The paper describes the first study of its kind.

Keywords

Citation

Hatemi‐J, A. and Irandoust, M. (2012), "Asymmetric interaction between government spending and terms of trade volatility: New evidence from hidden cointegration technique", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 39 No. 3, pp. 368-378. https://doi.org/10.1108/01443581211245937

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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