Research / BFI Working PaperAug 01, 2016

The Effect of Unconventional Fiscal Policy on Consumption Expenditure

Unconventional fiscal policy uses announcements of future increases in consumption taxes to generate inflation expectations and accelerate consumption expenditure. We exploit a natural experiment for an empirical test of the effectiveness of unconventional fiscal policy. To comply with European Union law, the German government announced in November 2005 an unexpected 3-percentage-point increase in value-added tax (VAT), effective in 2007. The shock increased individual households’ inflation expectations during 2006 and actual inflation in 2007. Germans’ willingness to purchase durables increased by 34% after the shock, compared to before and to matched households in other European countries not exposed to the VAT shock. Income, wealth effects, or intratemporal substitution cannot explain these results.

More Research From These Scholars

BFI Working Paper Mar 2, 2020

Gender Roles and the Gender Expectations Gap

Francesco D'Acunto, Ulrike Malmendier, Michael Weber
Topics:  Monetary Policy
BFI Working Paper Mar 4, 2024

Why Survey-Based Subjective Expectations are Meaningful and Important

Francesco D’Acunto, Michael Weber
Topics:  Uncategorized
Jul 24, 2023

Tell Me Something I Don’t Already Know: Learning in Low and High-Inflation Settings

Michael Weber, Serafin Frache, Dimitris Georgarakos, Bernardo Candia, Brent Meyer, Olivier Coibion, Tiziano Ropele, Saten Kumar, Geoff Kenny, Rodrigo Lluberas, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Jorge Ponce
Topics:  Monetary Policy