Cover of: Absorbing Shocks: National Rainy-Day Funds and Cross-Country Transfers in a Fiscal Union
Timothy J. Goodspeed

Absorbing Shocks: National Rainy-Day Funds and Cross-Country Transfers in a Fiscal Union

Section: Articles
Volume 72 (2016) / Issue 4, pp. 407-420 (14)
Published 09.07.2018
DOI 10.1628/001522116X14785541073025
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Summary
In this paper we investigate the interplay between national rainy-day funds and supranational transfers in a fiscal union. We find that moral hazard leads to lower contributions to a rainy day fund with a fiscal union present, and further that the higher the fiscal transfer, the lower will be the contributions to the rainy-day fund. The optimal size of the fiscal union trades-off the ex-post insurance provided by the union and the moral hazard which reduces national ex-ante preparation for stabilization policies. Optimally, the insurance provided by the fiscal union should be lower (1) the more effective is own-fiscal policy; (2) the more the presence of the fiscal union reduces rainy-day fund savings; (3) the lower is the relative probability of recession; and (4) the lower is the utility gain of redistribution in the union. We also find that commitment to a transfer policy is essential. A fiscal union that is prone to break the rules on transfers negatively impacts the ex-ante contributions to individual members' rainy day funds.