TY - JOUR AU - Caballero,Ricardo J. AU - Krishnamurthy,Arvind TI - Fiscal Policy and Financial Depth JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 10532 PY - 2004 Y2 - May 2004 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w10532 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w10532.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Ricardo J. Caballero MIT Department of Economics Room E52-373a Cambridge, MA 02142-1347 Tel: 617/253-0489 Fax: 617/253-6915 E-Mail: caball@mit.edu Arvind Krishnamurthy Kellogg School of Management Northwestern University 2001 Sheridan Road Evanston, IL 60208 Tel: 847/491-2671 Fax: 847/491-5719 E-Mail: a-krishnamurthy@northwestern.edu AB - Most economists and observers place the lack of fiscal discipline at the core of the recent Argentine crisis. This begs the question of how countries like Belgium or Italy (pre-Maastricht) could run large fiscal deficits and accumulate debts far beyond those of Argentina, without experiencing crises nearly as dramatic as that of Argentina? Why is it that Argentina cannot act like Belgium or Italy and pursue expansionary fiscal policy during downturns? We argue that advanced and emerging economies differ in their financial depth, and show that lack of financial depth constrains fiscal policy in a way that can overturn standard Keynesian fiscal policy prescriptions. We also provide empirical support for this viewpoint. Crowding out is systematically larger in emerging markets than in developed economies. More importantly, this difference is extreme during crises, when the crowding out coefficient exceeds one in emerging market economies. ER -