Friday, November 12, 2021
In a column for the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a Washington DC-based think tank, economist Dean Baker writes on the opportunity for China to invest in clean energy to resolve its “demographic crisis”. An excerpt from the article is as follows.
“As Paul Krugman wrote in a recent column, China is going to have to make a massive adjustment in its economy in the years ahead. It has been spending an incredible 43 percent of its GDP on capital formation, either investment goods purchased by businesses, or residential housing. By comparison, the figure for Japan is 24 percent and for the United States less than 22 percent.
This massive spending on capital formation made sense when China was seeing rapid growth in its labor force and also a huge shift in its population from rural to urban. But this process is now reaching an endpoint, both with a decline in its working-age population and the rural to urban shift largely completed.
It is also important to note that China is already heavily invested in clean energy. China is by far the world leader in solar energy, with more than twice as much as the United States, the second-largest user of solar power. It is also by far the world leader in wind energy, again with more than twice as much installed wind power as the United States. And, China also has more than twice as many electric cars on the road as any other country. This means that China has a large domestic clean energy sector which can stand to gain by further spending on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
If China wants a path through its “demographic crisis,” or, in other words, coping with secular stagnation, devoting substantial resources towards greening its economy would be a great path forward. In the process, they can also give a big hand to the rest of the world, both by sharing the technology and showing how it can be done, as well as reducing the damage they are doing to the planet themselves.”
Source: Baker, D. (2021). CEPR. Combatting Global Warming: The Solution to China’s Demographic “Crisis”.
Click here to read the full article.
In a column for the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a Washington DC-based think tank, economist Dean Baker writes on the opportunity for China to invest in clean energy to resolve its “demographic crisis”. An excerpt from the article is as follows.
“As Paul Krugman wrote in a recent column, China is going to have to make a massive adjustment in its economy in the years ahead. It has been spending an incredible 43 percent of its GDP on capital formation,
Posted by at 7:49 AM
Labels: Energy & Climate Change, Inclusive Growth
On cross-country:
On the US:
On China
On other countries:
On cross-country:
On the US:
Posted by at 5:00 AM
Labels: Global Housing Watch
Thursday, November 11, 2021
How does economic growth depend upon the nature of bureaucracy and the effectiveness of institutions in a nation?
Historically and empirically speaking, the two are often, if not always very strongly correlated. Besides, evidence gathered by historians and political scientists also fuels the idea that establishing an effective bureaucracy has been vital to the development of modern nation-states, particularly around functions such as national defence.
In their column for VoxEU, economists Tim Besley, Robin Burgess, Adnan Khan, Jonathan Old and Guo Xu present a review of the literature to broaden the discussion on the role that political institutions play in economic progress. They study parameters like the use of incentives in improving performance, selection criteria used in recruitment, relationships between the politicians and bureaucrats, and the role of non state actors like civil society organisations and NGOs in this column.
Finally, they suggest the following three methods to transition from a micro perspective to a much broader one to study this aspect. a transition from the study of microeconomic phenomena towards understanding larger, more complex mechanisms is an important next step to fully grasp how effective bureaucracies support development.
Click here to read the full article.
How does economic growth depend upon the nature of bureaucracy and the effectiveness of institutions in a nation?
Historically and empirically speaking, the two are often, if not always very strongly correlated. Besides, evidence gathered by historians and political scientists also fuels the idea that establishing an effective bureaucracy has been vital to the development of modern nation-states, particularly around functions such as national defence.
In their column for VoxEU,
Posted by at 2:36 PM
Labels: Inclusive Growth
New paper in Journal of Econometrics posted by Jacopo Cimadomo, Domenico Giannone, Michele Lenza, Francesca Monti & Andrej Sokold.
“Monitoring economic conditions in real time, or nowcasting, and Big Data analytics share some challenges, sometimes called the three “Vs”. Indeed, nowcasting is characterized by the use of a large number of time series (Volume), the complexity of the data covering various sectors of the economy, with different frequencies and precision and asynchronous release dates (Variety), and the need to incorporate new information continuously and in a timely manner (Velocity). In this paper, we explore three alternative routes to nowcasting with Bayesian Vector Autoregressive (BVAR) models and find that they can effectively handle the three Vs by producing, in real time, accurate probabilistic predictions of US economic activity and a meaningful narrative by means of scenario analysis.”
Continue reading here.
New paper in Journal of Econometrics posted by Jacopo Cimadomo, Domenico Giannone, Michele Lenza, Francesca Monti & Andrej Sokold.
“Monitoring economic conditions in real time, or nowcasting, and Big Data analytics share some challenges, sometimes called the three “Vs”. Indeed, nowcasting is characterized by the use of a large number of time series (Volume), the complexity of the data covering various sectors of the economy, with different frequencies and precision and asynchronous release dates (Variety),
Posted by at 11:44 AM
Labels: Forecasting Forum
Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Source: VoxEU
In a recent paper, economists Choi and Levchenko (2021) study firm-level industrial policy measures in South Korea in the 1970s to examine their impact on the South Korean economy.
“South Korea’s experience with industrial policy is important to understand, as it is one of the ‘growth miracle’ economies of the post-war era, known for its rapid transformation from a commodity and light manufacturing producer to a heavy manufacturing powerhouse. It has been argued that industrial policy played a central role in this transformation, with the temporary subsidies having had a large and statistically significant effect on firm sales as long as 30 years after they ended.”
The authors conclude that South Korea’s activist industrial policy appears to have succeeded even after taking into account its fiscal costs and general equilibrium effects. However, they also add a word of caution with this encouragement, that today’s policymakers face the same challenge as policymakers in the past: to identify conditions – such as dynamic productivity effects or externalities – under which activist industrial policy is welfare-improving.
Click here to read the full article.
Source: VoxEU
In a recent paper, economists Choi and Levchenko (2021) study firm-level industrial policy measures in South Korea in the 1970s to examine their impact on the South Korean economy.
“South Korea’s experience with industrial policy is important to understand, as it is one of the ‘growth miracle’ economies of the post-war era, known for its rapid transformation from a commodity and light manufacturing producer to a heavy manufacturing powerhouse.
Posted by at 9:15 AM
Labels: Inclusive Growth
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