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Sustainable Plans and Debt

Working Paper 399 | Published June 1, 1988

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Authors

Patrick J. Kehoe Monetary Advisor
V. V. Chari Consultant
Sustainable Plans and Debt

Abstract

In this paper we analyze the constraints imposed by dynamic consistency in a model of optimal taxation. We assume that only distorting taxes are available to finance government consumption. Optimal fiscal policy requires the use of debt to smooth distortions over time. Dynamic consistency requires that governments at each point in time not have an incentive to default on the inherited debt. We consider policy functions which map the history of the economy including the actions of past governments into current decisions. A sustainable plan is a sequence of history-contingent policies which are optimal at each date given that future policies will be selected according to the plan. We show that if agents discount the future sufficiently little and if government consumption fluctuates then optimal sustainable plans yield policies and allocations which are identical to those under full commitment. We contrast our notion of dynamic consistency with other definitions.




Published in _Journal of Economic Theory_ (Vol. 61, Iss. 2, December 1993, pp. 230-261), https://doi.org/10.1006/jeth.1993.1068.