Government spending and revenues in the Greek economy: evidence from nonlinear cointegration

  • Athanasios Athanasenas
  • Constantinos Katrakilidis
  • Emmanouil Trachanas

This paper re-evaluates the long-run macroeconomic relationship between government revenues and expenditures of the Greek economy over the period 1999-2010. The empirical analysis applies the newly developed asymmetric ARDL cointegration methodology of Shin et al. (2011) which permits more flexibility in the dynamic adjustment process towards equilibrium than in the classical case of a linear model. Our findings point towards the fiscal synchronisation hypothesis, supporting evidence of asymmetric interactions between the two fiscal components in both the long- and the short-run time horizon. More particularly, in the long run, the negative changes of expenditures dominate the response of revenues, while the opposite applies in the response of expenditures.