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Is Scotland a Region?

Is Scotland a Region?. Grant Allan and Kim Swales Urban and Regional Economics Seminar Group Open University of Wales 25 th - 26 th September 2013. Outline. What is a region? Regional modelling Is Scotland a region? Sub-regional heterogeneity Impact of independence/greater devolution.

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Is Scotland a Region?

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  1. Is Scotland a Region? Grant Allan and Kim Swales Urban and Regional Economics Seminar Group Open University of Wales 25th - 26th September 2013

  2. Outline • What is a region? • Regional modelling • Is Scotland a region? • Sub-regional heterogeneity • Impact of independence/greater devolution

  3. What is a region? • Difficult question to answer in abstract. • At least two ways to consider a region: • A homogeneous space (Gwilym Price) • A structured space (John Parr) • Scotland is an administrative (devolved) region. Is it correct to treat it as an economic region? • Recent Treasury Report “Macroeconomic and Fiscal Performance of Scotland” shows the performance of Scotland is comparable to the UK in recent past: • (gdp/worker), growth.

  4. A region for policy modelling • Considered the way the region has been defined in use. • Outline the assumptions that we (FAI) make in regional modelling • Ask why we have applied the model to Scotland • Consider whether Scotland is an appropriate economy to be modelled in this way, given the heterogeneity within Scotland. • Raise some issues on inter-regional models

  5. Modelling Assumptions • Sectors have classical/neo-classical production technology • Constant returns to scale technology • Competitive product markets • Trade driven by imperfect competition (Armington assumptions) • Open factor markets • Unified national financial market (exogenous r/i) • Unified (but imperfectly competitive) labour market • Inter-regional migration (flow equilibrium) • Typically no other fixed (region specific) input • Industrial disaggregation (Industrial structure and linkages matter) • Welfare transfers financed exogenously. • Impose no individual macroeconomic constraints

  6. Classical long-run characteristics • For demand shock, you get an extended IO model of the Batey-Madden type. (Industrial structure and linkages matter, endogenous population) • For a supply (efficiency) shock you get the IO price-dual (Ghoshian) model. • Structurally, the region has a large traded sector, so that the impact on export demand (and import substitution) are typically important for both demand and supply shocks. • In the long-run it operates as a classic export-base type model

  7. General characteristics • In the short run fixed labour force and specific capital stocks limit full adjustment (reflected in prices). • In many ways like a NEG model in the sense that imperfect competition in the market for traded goods is very important but with no increasing returns (long run expansion limited by export markets).

  8. Why apply the model to Scotland? • Data • Calibration: IO tables, National Account data • Parameter values • Policy • Regional policy • Scottish specific policy (Scottish Office/Scottish Enterprise) • Over time these arguments strengthened • Devolution and Independence debate • Improved data sources

  9. The system of regions in the UK • Shouldn’t Scotland be modelled as part of a UK national system? • Almost certainly (Mark Partridge) • What should a UK regional disaggregation look like? • Individual devolved regions? • Disaggregation of England?

  10. How far do the assumptions hold? • Essentially the model assumes homogeneity within the region • Key economic characteristics should be similar: • Labour market conditions • Production function • Or in some constant structure

  11. Intra-Scottish labour market variation

  12. Employment rates

  13. Unified labour market • Difficult to argue that this is a unified labour market with such big variation in unemployment and employment rates. • But perhaps there is an underlying urban/rural structure (high employment rates in the rural (particularly highland)) regions. Low employment rate and high unemployment rate in urban regions. • Doesn’t appear to be the case

  14. GVA per head

  15. GVA per employee

  16. Gross Domestic Household Income

  17. GVA growth(cumulative growth, 1997 to 2010 minus Scottish GVA growth)

  18. Shift share full calculations National share Industry mix Regional shift

  19. Cumulative Regional shift by region

  20. GDP figures • Much less easy to tell a rural/urban story. • Glasgow has low productivity and negative differential growth in the shift share analysis although favourable structure. Dundee has both low industry mix and regional shift. • Edinburgh and Aberdeen are major sources of growth

  21. Growth Sectors in space

  22. Is Scotland a Region? • Is It appropriate to treat Scotland as a unified region? • Does spatial structure affect performance. • Does the intra-regional location of a shock affect the regional impact? • At present Scotland has two primary geographical sources of GDP growth: Edinburgh and Aberdeen (with Inverness and North Lanark). Does Scotland face the same issue of polarised growth as the UK? • Should there be more spatially unbalanced industrial policy in Scotland? • Independently of the independence vote, will sub-regional concerns become much more prominant?

  23. Scottish Government/ESRC-funded modelling • North Sea oil+gas is an important input: • Likely that there will be an augmented set of (semi?) official IO accounts • Should be formally modelled • Labour market: • Greater skill disaggregation (unskilled more region specific) • Is geographic disaggregation needed? • Income distribution • Household disaggregation • Should there sub-regional disaggregation • Scotland RUK NEG model

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