摘要

In this study, by including 15 production sectors and linking real and financial sub-models through various channels of fund flows, interest rates, commercial bank intermediation, monetary and fiscal policies, a financial computable general equilibrium (CUE) model, which represents salient features of the Turkish economy, is formulated and counterfactual simulations are performed to explore the question of how changing the government deficit financing options affects the stakeholders and macroeconomic variables in the Turkish economy under both fixed and flexible interest rate regimes. In the benchmark, treasury bonds and central bank credits finance a certain percentage of the government deficit. In the deficit financing simulation scenario, the proportion financed by treasury bonds is increased while the proportion financed by the central bank is decreased under both fixed and flexible interest rate regimes to observe the effects of policy changing. Our simulation results show that deficit financing policy change makes commercial banks better off in both interest rate regimes particularly in flexible interest rate regime while household and enterprise sectors slightly suffer. The macroeconomic impact of the policy change is in line with the theory as the inflation rate decreases, and real interest rate increases in both interest rage regimes. Besides, though the real GNP slightly decreases in the short run, it slightly increases in the long run under both interest rage regimes.