When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses

Motivated by the recent COVID-induced global recession, this study seeks to shed light on the effectiveness of macroeconomic policy responses in situations of economic crisis. By constructing a granular database of response policies enacted during the 2007 Global Financial Crisis and the 2020 COVID...

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Main Authors: Ong, Audrey Sze Yun, Ng, Celine Si Qi, Tan, Boon Wee
Other Authors: Akshar Saxena
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148344
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1483442023-03-05T15:41:58Z When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses Ong, Audrey Sze Yun Ng, Celine Si Qi Tan, Boon Wee Akshar Saxena School of Social Sciences aksharsaxena@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Economic theory::Macroeconomics Motivated by the recent COVID-induced global recession, this study seeks to shed light on the effectiveness of macroeconomic policy responses in situations of economic crisis. By constructing a granular database of response policies enacted during the 2007 Global Financial Crisis and the 2020 COVID Crisis, we compared countries’ policy choices across financial and pandemic crises, and empirically assessed for optimal compositions of crisis response packages consisting fiscal, labour, welfare and liquidity policies. Broadly, our findings suggest that governments’ policy preferences differ between normal and crisis conditions, as well as across different crisis types. Furthermore, through a series of Fixed Effects regressions, we showed that fiscal interventions should be prioritised when proportioning resources within overarching crisis response packages. Additionally, within such fiscal interventions, focusing on government expenditure is effective for stimulating economic recovery during financial crises, while tax-related interventions work across both financial and pandemic crises. Sectoral-specific fiscal strategies yielded limited effectiveness. All in all, in responding to economic crisis, policymakers should focus on fiscal interventions while considering the specific nature of the crisis at hand to further judge the suitability of fiscal policy sub-types. Bachelor of Arts in Economics 2021-04-26T02:02:07Z 2021-04-26T02:02:07Z 2021 Final Year Project (FYP) Ong, A. S. Y., Ng, C. S. Q. & Tan, B. W. (2021). When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148344 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148344 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Economic theory::Macroeconomics
spellingShingle Social sciences::Economic theory::Macroeconomics
Ong, Audrey Sze Yun
Ng, Celine Si Qi
Tan, Boon Wee
When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
description Motivated by the recent COVID-induced global recession, this study seeks to shed light on the effectiveness of macroeconomic policy responses in situations of economic crisis. By constructing a granular database of response policies enacted during the 2007 Global Financial Crisis and the 2020 COVID Crisis, we compared countries’ policy choices across financial and pandemic crises, and empirically assessed for optimal compositions of crisis response packages consisting fiscal, labour, welfare and liquidity policies. Broadly, our findings suggest that governments’ policy preferences differ between normal and crisis conditions, as well as across different crisis types. Furthermore, through a series of Fixed Effects regressions, we showed that fiscal interventions should be prioritised when proportioning resources within overarching crisis response packages. Additionally, within such fiscal interventions, focusing on government expenditure is effective for stimulating economic recovery during financial crises, while tax-related interventions work across both financial and pandemic crises. Sectoral-specific fiscal strategies yielded limited effectiveness. All in all, in responding to economic crisis, policymakers should focus on fiscal interventions while considering the specific nature of the crisis at hand to further judge the suitability of fiscal policy sub-types.
author2 Akshar Saxena
author_facet Akshar Saxena
Ong, Audrey Sze Yun
Ng, Celine Si Qi
Tan, Boon Wee
format Final Year Project
author Ong, Audrey Sze Yun
Ng, Celine Si Qi
Tan, Boon Wee
author_sort Ong, Audrey Sze Yun
title When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
title_short When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
title_full When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
title_fullStr When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
title_full_unstemmed When the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
title_sort when the invisible hand goes out of hand : an evaluation of crisis responses
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148344
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