Wednesday, November 15th, 2017 Returning to the Golden Rule of Balanced Budgets: The Institutional and Political Economy of Restricting Public Deficits and Debt

DateTimeLocation
Wednesday, November 15, 20174:00PM - 5:30PMSeminar Room 208N, Munk School of Global Affairs,
1 Devonshire Place

Description

Returning to the Golden Rule of Balanced Budgets: The Institutional and Political Economy of Restricting Public Deficits and Debt

The “golden rule” of public finance states that over an economic cycle, governments should borrow only to invest and not to fund current spending, and that the current budget must always balance or be brought into surplus. In Ontario, all municipalities are subject to legal borrowing limits, with special exceptions for Toronto and York Region.

Yet implementing the “golden rule” is not a simple question of setting limits to deficits and debt. Using the case of Switzerland, international expert and IMFG Visiting Scholar Bernard Dafflon will present new research and recommendations for budget management in the public sector.

How do we balance the needs of current expenditures with intergenerational equity? Does fiscal control over deficit or debt require top-down policies from higher levels of government, or is self-imposed control reasonable?

In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, the issue of controlling public budget deficits and debt received renewed attention from both politicians and public finance economists. Around the world, detailed and precise regulations were imposed on how governments deal with public deficit and debt. This seminar will demystify public sector budget management practices, and help policymakers and the public better understand whether governments are promoting budget responsibility or not.

About the Speaker

Bernard Dafflon is a Visiting Scholar at IMFG and Professor Emeritus in the Faculty of Economic and Social Science, University of Fribourg, Switzerland. Since 2013, he has been an advisor to the Tunisian government on decentralization. His research interests are fiscal federalism, decentralization and local finance, deficit and public debt rules, and the use of the benefit principle in financing environmental policies. While at IMFG, he will be conducting research on municipal finance.

Seating is limited for this event, and registration is required.

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