> This paper investigates the relation between growth forecast errors and planned fiscal consolidation during the crisis. We find that, in advanced economies, stronger planned fiscal consolidation has been associated with lower growth than expected, with the relation being particularly strong, both statistically and economically, early in the crisis. A natural interpretation is that fiscal multipliers were substantially higher than implicitly assumed by forecasters. The weaker relation in more recent years may reflect in part learning by forecasters and in part smaller multipliers than in the early years of the crisis.
Even the IMF, who pushed for austerity
* https://www.brettonwoodsproject.org/2009/07/art-564828/
admitted that it can kill growth:
> This paper investigates the relation between growth forecast errors and planned fiscal consolidation during the crisis. We find that, in advanced economies, stronger planned fiscal consolidation has been associated with lower growth than expected, with the relation being particularly strong, both statistically and economically, early in the crisis. A natural interpretation is that fiscal multipliers were substantially higher than implicitly assumed by forecasters. The weaker relation in more recent years may reflect in part learning by forecasters and in part smaller multipliers than in the early years of the crisis.
* https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WP/Issues/2016/12/31/Gro...
* https://www.aeaweb.org/articles?id=10.1257/aer.103.3.117
You'd think they'd learn their lesson, but nope: post-COVID they were pushing austerity again.