Abstract:
Good macroeconomic policies can be transformed into good economic performance.
Fiscal policies whether public expenditures or revenues can actively be used to
improve economic performance by the governments of the developing economies.
The study has been constructed to explore the effects of fiscal variables in aggregate
as well as in disaggregated form on private investment and economic growth. It
covers the period from 1972 to 2007 in the context of Pakistan. Enhancement of
private investment and fostering of economic growth in the economy will not only
bring macroeconomic stability but also generate employment in the long-run.
After establishing the integration order of variables, Autoregressive Distributed Lag
(ARDL) approach to co-integration has been employed to find the long-run effects as
well as short-run effects. In the first step, existence of long-run relationship has been
determined by using bounds testing approach. Long-run coefficients and error
correction term has been obtained in the second step. Modified accelerator model and
neo-classical model have been used to find the empirical relationship between fiscal
variables and private investment. The outcomes under different estimators of the
accelerator investment model seem to largely confirm that fiscal variables play some
role to stimulate private investment though some of theses variables have been found
to be insignificant statistically. The results of the neoclassical model are largely in
agreement to those under the accelerator model in terms of signs and significance.
Both confirm the hypothesis of crowding-in effects of public investment in different
sectors though weak statistically. Further, in order to find the impact of fiscal policy
on economic growth, endogenous growth model has been used. The results imply that
public expenditures are complementary to economic growth, though with weaker
magnitude. Similarly, different components of taxation have weak and mixed effects
on economic growth but taxes in aggregate form, though weak, have positive
contribution towards economic growth.