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Potential Output and Fiscal Challenges Philip Bagnoli, OECD

Potential Output and Fiscal Challenges Philip Bagnoli, OECD FRB Workshop: L’impact de la crise sur la croissance de l’économie et les finances publiques : les réflexions et évaluations des économistes 27 October 2009. Outline OECD estimate of the impact on potential

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Potential Output and Fiscal Challenges Philip Bagnoli, OECD

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  1. Potential Output and Fiscal Challenges Philip Bagnoli, OECD FRB Workshop: L’impact de la crisesur la croissance de l’économie et les finances publiques : les réflexions et évaluations des économistes 27 October 2009

  2. Outline OECD estimate of the impact on potential production function and filter based Includes capital and potential labour (with labour efficiency) Areas where some impact is historically evident Capital NAIRU Areas where impact is historically nuanced Participation rates Areas where impact it is ambiguous Total factor productivity Fiscal challenges

  3. OECD change in potential growth Estimated effects on potential • “Level” effect from reduced capital intensity and labour input, see Chapter 4 of OECD Economic Outlook No 85. Growth effect not distinguishable.

  4. … broadly consistent with evidence from previous severe downturns Estimated effects on potential

  5. OECD change in potential through capital Estimated effects via capital • “Level” effect from reduced capital intensity, see Chapter 4 of OECD Economic Outlook No 85.

  6. Growth in the capital stock falls, particularly following banking crises Estimated effects via capital For current projections, long-run decline in capital intensity is based on a static equilibrium calculation of the effect of higher capital costs, reflecting permanently higher risk aversion (see Box 4.2 in EO85). Much of this adjustment is projected to have already taken place by end 2010.

  7. Hysteresis effects on the NAIRU vary considerably across countries Estimated effects via NAIRU • Increase in NAIRU varies according to: • proportion of rise in unemployment that is translated into long-term unemployment • relative effect of long-term unemployed on inflation • Extent of recent institutional reforms (esp to EPL, unemployment benefits)

  8. OECD change in potential through labour Estimated effects via NAIRU “Level” effect mainly from increased NAIRU, see Chapter 4 of OECD Economic Outlook No 85. +0.02 pp annual weighted average improvement in NAIRU for 2012-2017.

  9. Trend labour force participation is typically reduced following severe downturns Likely effects via participation Severe recessions have long-lasting effects on participation. Young often most affected (more education?). But also country-specific evidence of hysteresis–type effects.

  10. TFP effects are mixed, but more likely to be negative when regulation is anti-competitive Tentative thoughts on tfp

  11. … but there is wide variation across countries(unweighted average is 4%) OECD estimates of hit to potential

  12. Debts, deficits and stylised consolidation Fiscal challenge

  13. Debts, deficits and stylised consolidation Fiscal challenge

  14. Debts, deficits and stylised consolidation Fiscal challenge The impact on potential is a level effect – so growth recovers with financial hardship. Productivity impact through endogenous growth effect would be long-lasting growth effect.

  15. Co-ordinated consolidation Fiscal challenge

  16. Conclusions Tentative conclusions and further questions Current estimate is of a permanent fall in OECD-wide level of potential by 3% + Main identified effect via higher cost of capital=> capital intensity Hysteresis effects on NAIRU, wide cross-county variation Policy dependent, different (better) this time? Possibly large negative effects on participation Evidence from Nordics of hysteresis-type effects. Young most vulnerable (but less concern if more education?) But loss of pension wealth lead to retirement postponement? Sign & size of TFP effects difficult to identify More likely to be positive if product market competition strong? R&D channel probably small? possibly large if endogenous growth considerations are important ???

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