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Title Fiscal implications of the global economic and financial crisis / by a staff team from the Fiscal Affairs Department
Published Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2009

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Description 1 online resource (85 pages)
Series Occasional paper ; 269
Occasional paper (International Monetary Fund) ; no. 269.
Contents Cover; Contents; Preface; Abbreviations; I: Overview; II: Fiscal Implications of the Crisis: Direct Costs; Headline Support to Financial Sectors; Net Cost over the Medium Term; Boxes; 2.1. Fiscal Accounting Treatment of Support to the Financial Sector; Tables; 2.1. Headline Support for Financial and Other Sectors and Upfront Financing Need; Potential Total Cost of Implicit and Explicit Guarantees; III: Fiscal Implications of the Crisis: The Cost of the Recession; Automatic Stabilizers; Other Nondiscretionary Effects; 3.1. G-20 Countries: Contribution of Automatic Stabilizers
3.2. Loss of Fiscal Revenue Due to Commodity Price Movements3.3. G-20 Countries: Other Nondiscretionary Factors; Discretionary Responses to the Crisis; 3.4. G-20 Countries: Estimated Cost of Discretionary Measures; 3.5. G-20 Stimulus Measures, 2008-10; Figures; 3.1. Composition of Discretionary Fiscal Measures in G-20 Countries, 2008-10; IV: Fiscal Implications of the Crisis: Effects Through the Funded Component of the Pension System; Losses of Funded Pension Schemes; Risks for Fiscal Accounts; 4.1. Pension Fund Assets in OECD Countries; 4.2. Pension Plan Assets by Economy, End-2007
V: The Outlook for Public Finances in Light of the CrisisShort-Term Outlook; The Medium-Term Outlook and Risk Assessment; 5.1. G-20 Countries: Change in Fiscal Balances and Government Debt; 5.1. G-20 Countries: Outlook for Public Finances; 5.2. Impact of the Crisis on Public Finances: Contributing Factors; 5.3. G-20 Advanced Countries: Evolution of Government Debt; 5.4. Lower Growth Scenario; 5.2. Public Finances; 5.5. Prolonged Slowdown Scenario; 5.6. Government Debt in Case of Prolonged Slowdown, Higher Interest Rate, and Contingent Liability Shock
VI: The Risk for Fiscal Solvency and the Appropriate Policy ResponseThe Level of Government Debt; 6.1. Long-TermGovernment Bond Yields and Spreads; The Dynamics of Government Debt: Current and Future Deficits; 6.1. Debt/GDP Stabilizing Primary Balance; 6.1. Historical Episodes of Major Accumulations and Decumulations of Government Debt; The Way Forward; 6.2. Selected Countries: Public Debt-to-GDP Ratio; 6.2. Debt and Primary Balance; 6.3. Fiscal Costs of Aging; 6.3. Population Aging in Emerging Market Countries, 2005 and 2050; 6.4. Advanced G-20 Countries: Government Debt
6.2. Post-Banking-Crisis Fiscal Consolidation: Finland and Sweden During the 1990s6.4. Emerging Economies: Selected Debt Reduction Episodes; 6.5. EU-5 Countries: Outlook for Fiscal Balance Versus 2006 Stability Program; 6.5. Net Present Value of Impact on Fiscal Deficit of Crisis and Aging-Related Spending; Appendixes; I. Reporting the Fiscal Impact of Financial Sector Support; A1.1. Statistical Treatment of Government Intervention (Under GFSM 1986); A1.2. Statistical Treatment of Government Intervention (Under GFSM 2001); II. Financial Sector Support Measures
Summary The economic and financial crisis is affecting the fiscal accounts of virtually every country. Public sector support for the financial system, fiscal stimulus and the automatic stabilizers, as well as the revenue decline from the downturn in commodity and asset prices, are leading to sharp increases in deficits and debt stocks around the world. Expansionary fiscal policy continues to be necessary in the short term to stimulate economic recovery. But it is now essential that governments reassess the state of their public finances in light of the global crisis and adopt strategies that will ensure medium- and long-term fiscal sustainability. Many of the advanced economies most affected by the crisis are also those where age-related spending will increase markedly in the coming years, adding particular urgency to the need to identify medium-term consolidation strategies. This new paper, which focuses mainly on advanced and emerging market economies, employs projections based on the April 2009 World Economic Outlook to quantify the fiscal implications of the crisis for a cross-section of countries. The authors assess the post-shock fiscal balances and debt outlook, and suggest ways for governments to clarify their strategies for maintaining fiscal solvency
Notes Available in PDF, ePUB, and Mobi formats on the Internet
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 81-83)
Notes English
Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL
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Subject Debts, Public.
Economic stabilization.
Finance, Public.
Fiscal policy.
Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009.
Crise économique.
Crise financière.
Aspects socio-économiques.
Economie internationale.
Pensions de retraite.
Finances publiques.
Dette publique.
Debts, Public
Economic stabilization
Finance, Public
Fiscal policy
Business & Economics.
Economic Theory.
Wirtschaftskrise.
Finanzmarktkrise.
Finanzpolitik.
Welt.
Form Electronic book
Author International Monetary Fund. Fiscal Affairs Department, issuing body.
LC no. 2010280564
ISBN 1451994141
9781451994148
9781452765464
1452765464
9781452731155
1452731152
1589068688
9781589068681
OTHER TI IMF eLibrary