UniCa UniCa News Notizie The Structural Transformation between Manufacturing and Services, and the Decline in US GDP Volatility

The Structural Transformation between Manufacturing and Services, and the Decline in US GDP Volatility

I venerdì di economia con Alessio Moro, Università di Cagliari e Universidad Carlos III, Madrid
05 dicembre 2008
Dipartimento di Economia e Crenos
  
Ciclo di Seminari
   
Prossima iniziativa:
 
5 dicembre
Alessio Moro, Università di Cagliari e Universidad Carlos III, Madrid
The Structural Transformation between Manufacturing and Services, and the
Decline in US GDP Volatility
 
Salvo diversa indicazione, tutti i seminari avranno luogo il venerdì alle ore 12:00 presso l’Aula Magna della Facoltà di Economia in Viale Sant’Ignazio 74.
La serie di seminari è coordinata dal Prof. B. Moro e dal Prof. P. Mattana.

Per maggiori informazioni, siete pregati di mettervi in contatto con Prof. Moro, telefonando al numero 070 675 3313 o via e-mail all’indirizzo moro@unica.it____

 

Abstract
 
For a single firm with a given volatility of total factor productivity at the gross output level (GTFP), the volatility of total factor productivity at the value added level (YTFP) increases with the share of intermediate goods in gross output. For a Cobb-Douglas production function in capital, labor and intermediate goods, YTFP volatility is equal to GTFP volatility divided by one minus the share of intermediate goods in gross output. In the U.S., this share is steadily around 0.6 for manufacturing and 0.38 for services during the 1960-2005 period. Thus, the same level of GTFP volatility in the two sectors implies a 55% larger YTFP volatility in manufacturing. This fact contributes to the higher measured YTFP volatility in manufacturing with respect to services. It follows that, as the services share in GDP increases from 0.53 in 1960 to 0.71 in 2005 in the U.S., GDP volatility is reduced. I construct a two-sector dynamic general equilibrium input-output model to investigate the role of the sectorial reallocation between manufacturing and services in reducing U.S. GDP volatility. Numerical results for the calibrated model economy suggest that the sectorial reallocation can account for almost a half of the 56% GDP volatility difference between the 1960-1983 and the 1984-2005 periods. When the highly volatile period 1973-1983 is excluded, the sectorial reallocation alone is able to account for the entire difference in GDP volatility between the 1960-1973 and the 1984-2005 periods.
 
JEL Classification: C67, C68, E25, E32.
 
Keywords: Volatility decline, Business cycles, Structural change, Total factor productivity (TFP).

Ultime notizie

Questionario e social

Condividi su:
Impostazioni cookie