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Home >  Short Publications >  Federal Government Debt and Interest Rates
Federal Government Debt and Interest Rates
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By R. Glenn Hubbard, Eric M. Engen
Posted: Monday, July 12, 2004
WORKING PAPERS
Presented at a July 2004 AEI event  
Publication Date: June 2, 2004

AEI's working paper series  
Download file This working paper is available as an Adobe Acrobat PDF.
 

Summary

Past research on the effect of government debt on interest rates have found mixed results, from a large effect to none at all, depending on the approach used. Using a standard set of data and a simple analytical framework, the authors reconsider and add to empirical evidence on the effect of federal government debt on interest rates.

First, the effect of government debt on the real interest rates is analytically derived, and it is found that an increase in government debt equivalent to 1 percent of GDP would increase the real interest rate by two to three basis points.

The authors then do an empirical analysis in two parts: first, a variety of conventional reduced-form specifications linking forward-looking and current measures of interest rates and forward-looking and current measures of government debt and other variables are examined, and second, evidence using vector autoregression analysis is provided. In general, the results are consistent with what was predicted in the simple analytical calculation.

Eric M. Engen is a resident scholar, and R. Glenn Hubbard a visiting scholar, at AEI.

Available in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.
Related Links
Event: Does Federal Government Debt Affect Interest Rates?
More working papers
Source Notes:   Working Paper No. 105
AEI Print Index No. 17200


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