To read this content please select one of the options below:

Permanent and transitory effect of public debt on economic growth

Attahir Babaji Abubakar (University of Aberdeen Business School, Aberdeen, UK) (Department of Economics, Business School, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria)
Suleiman O. Mamman (Laboratory for International and Regional Economics, Graduate School of Economics and Management, Ural Federal University, Yekaterinburg, Russian Federation)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 25 September 2020

Issue publication date: 1 July 2021

575

Abstract

Purpose

This study examines the effect of public debt on the economic growth of OECD countries by disentangling the effect into permanent and transitory components. The study covers 37 OECD countries.

Design/methodology/approach

The Mundlak decomposition was employed to decompose the effect of public debt into its transitory and permanent effect on economic growth. To account for potential endogeneity problem, the Hausman and Taylor estimator was employed to estimate the decomposed model. Further, the study disaggregated the OECD model into country group models for further analysis of the dynamics of the relationship between the variables.

Findings

The findings of the study reveal that in the full OECD model public debt exerts a significant negative permanent and positive transitory effect on economic growth. This was robust to alternative model specifications. The magnitude of the negative permanent effect of debt was found to be larger than the positive transitory effect. Further, the estimates of the disaggregated models reveal that though public debt has a negative permanent effect across all the country groups, it was not the case for the transitory effect of debt. Also, a net public debt model was estimated, and its effect on public debt was found to be largely insignificant, exhibiting a Ricardian-like behaviour.

Originality/value

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study, particularly in the OECD context that employed the Mundlak transformation to examine the permanent versus transitory effect of public debt on economic growth.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the editor and anonymous referees for their useful comments.

Citation

Abubakar, A.B. and Mamman, S.O. (2021), "Permanent and transitory effect of public debt on economic growth", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. 48 No. 5, pp. 1064-1083. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-04-2020-0154

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles