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Title: Ownership and Growth


1
Ownership and Growth
Thorvaldur Gylfason
2
Presentation in Two Parts
  • General discussion of economic growth and the
    analytical background of the paper
  • Specific discussion of the topic at hand public
    vs. private ownership and the difference it makes
    for growth
  • Joint work with Tryggvi Thor Herbertsson and
    Gylfi Zoega

3
Economic Growth
  • As old as economics itself
  • Adam Smith, John Stuart Mill, Alfred Marshall,
    Joseph Schumpeter were all growth theorists
  • Then Harrod and Domar came along, summarizing the
    old literature by
  • g sE - ?
  • where E Y/K.
  • This means, inter alia, that saving is good for
    growth.

4
Economic Growth The Short Run vs. the Long Run
Economic growth in the long run
Potential output
Actual output
Upswing
National economic output
Business cycles in the short run
Thus, increased saving may reduce actual output,
while increasing potential output.
Downswing
Time
5
Economic Growth The Short Run vs. the Long Run
  • To analyze the movements of actual output from
    year to year, viz., in the short run
  • Need short-run macroeconomic theory
  • Keynesian or neoclassical
  • To analyze the path of potential output over long
    periods
  • Need modern theory of economic growth
  • Neoclassical or endogenous

6
Economic Growth Solows Rebellion
  • Solow rebelled against Harrod and Domar by
    pointing out that economic growth in the long run
    must be exogenous.
  • In the long run, growth depends solely on
    population growth and technological progress g
    n q
  • To show this, Solow made E Y/K endogenous.
  • Hence, saving cannot affect long-run growth.

7
Why not?
  • Take another look at
  • g sE - ?
  • When s increases, E begins to decrease, according
    to Solow, and continues to do so until g is
    restored to its intial, exogenously determined
    value.
  • This occurs essentially because an increase in s
    increases K, so that E Y/K goes down.

8
Economic Growth The Solow Model
  • But this approach distracted attention from two
    key questions
  • How long is the long run?
  • Is it possible that the long run is so long as to
    be almost irrelevant from the point of view of
    economic policy?
  • What determines output per head?
  • Is is possible that the level of output per head
    is endogenous in the long run even if its rate of
    growth is not?

9
Economic Growth The Solow Model
In long-run steady-state equilibrium at A, growth
is exogenous g n q
y Y/L
A
E
k K/L
10
Economic Growth The Solow Model
The parameter A represents technology and
efficiency.
11
The Neoclassical Theory of Exogenous Economic
Growth
Traces the rate of growth of output per capita to
a single source
Technological progress
Hence, economic growth in the long run is immune
to economic policy, good or bad
To change the rate of growth of real output per
head you have to change the rate of technical
progress. ROBERT SOLOW
12
The New Theory of Endogenous Economic Growth
  • Traces the rate of growth of output per capita to
    three main sources
  • Saving
  • Efficiency
  • Depreciation

Meanwhile, on the ranch ...
The proximate causes of economic growth are the
effort to economize, the accumulation of
knowledge, and the accumulation of
capital. ARTHUR LEWIS
13
A Simple Model of Endogenous Growth
  • Four building blocks
  • S I
  • Saving equals investment in equilibrium.
  • S sY
  • Saving is proportional to income.
  • I ?K ?K
  • Investment involves addition to capital stock.
  • Y EK
  • Output depends on quality and quantity of
    capital.

14
Endogenous Growth in the Harrod-Domar Model
  • This version of the endogenous growth model is
    simply a restatement of the Harrod-Domar model
  • where growth depends on
  • A. the saving rate
  • B. the capital/output ratio
  • C. the depreciation rate

15
The Main Point about Endogenous Growth
  • If it increases economic efficiency, it is also
    good for growth.
  • This idea seems to go a long way towards
    explaining per capita income differentials of 30
    or 60 across countries.
  • And even if long-run growth is exogenous, the
    level of income is endogenous.
  • This is why endogenous growth theory is perhaps
    best viewed as an extension of the Solow model of
    exogenous growth.

16
Specific Model
Two equations in two unknowns
Now, assume learning by doing
It follows that
and that
17
A Picture of the Model
g
45
sE - ?
A
q
n
18
Properties of the Model
s E ? n
g - 0
q - -
19
Sources of Endogenous Growth
  • Saving
  • Fits real world experience quite well.
  • No coincidence that, in East Asia, saving rates
    of 30-40 of GDP went along with rapid economic
    growth.
  • No coincidence either that many African economies
    with saving rates around 10 of GDP have been
    stagnant.
  • OECD countries saving rates of about 20 of GDP
  • Important implication for economic policy
  • Economic stability with low inflation and
    positive real interest rates encourages saving,
    and thus is good for growth.

20
Sources of Endogenous Growth
Income per capita
East Asia
400
High saving rates
300
200
OECD
Medium saving rates
Africa
100
Low saving rates
1965
1990
21
Sources of Endogenous Growth
  • Examples
  • Oil shocks
  • Soviet collapse
  • Depreciation
  • The effect of depreciation on growth is related
    to that of saving on growth.
  • Unprofitable investment in the past reduces the
    quality of capital and thus makes it depreciate
    more rapidly, necessitating more replacement
    investment to make up for wear and tear.
  • The more national saving has to be set aside for
    replacement investment, the less will be
    available for the buildup of new capital.

22
Sources of Endogenous Growth
  • Efficiency
  • Also fits real world experience quite well
  • Technical progress good for growth because it
    allows us to squeeze more output from given
    inputs.
  • But that is exactly what increased efficiency is
    all about!
  • Thus, technology is best viewed as an aspect of
    general economic efficiency.
  • Important implication for economic policy
  • Everything that increases economic efficiency, no
    matter what, is also good for growth.

23
Sources of Endogenous Growth
  • Five sources of increased efficiency
  • Liberalization of prices and trade increases
    efficiency, and thus is good for growth.
  • Stabilization reduces the inefficiency associated
    with inflation, and thus is good for growth.
  • Privatization reduces the inefficiency associated
    with state-owned enterprises, and thus
  • Education makes the labor force more efficient.
  • Technological progress also enhances efficiency.
  • The possibilities are virtually endless!

24
Sources of Endogenous Growth
  • This is good news!
  • If growth were merely a matter of technology, we
    would not be able to do much about it
  • except to follow technology-friendly policies
    by supporting RD and such.
  • But if growth depends on saving and efficiency,
    there are things that we can do, in the private
    sector as well as through the public sector, to
    foster rapid economic growth.
  • Because everything that is good for saving and
    efficiency is also good for growth.

25
What to Do to Encourage Economic Growth
  • Maintain strong incentives to save
  • Keep inflation low and real interest rates
    positive
  • Maintain financial system in good health
  • so as to channel saving into high-quality
    investment
  • Place strong emphasis on efficiency
  • 1. Liberal price and trade regimes
  • 2. Low inflation
  • 3. Strong private sector
  • 4. More and better education

Recap
26
The Bottom Line
  • Whatever increases efficiency also increases
    economic growth.
  • Solow Output per head increases, and growth also
    increases for a while.
  • Romer Economic growth increases (and thereby
    also output per head).
  • This idea has triggered a large empirical
    literature since the early 1990s.

27
My Work in this Area Three Main Channels
  • High inflation hurts growth.
  • Follows directly from
  • Inflation may reduce both saving and efficiency.
  • Excessive dependence on natural resources impedes
    growth.
  • Has to do with
  • The Dutch disease
  • Rent seeking
  • Education
  • Public vs. private ownership

28
Which brings me, at last, to the point of this
paper ...
Privatization and Economic Growth
  • Privatization means that profit-oriented owners
    and able managers are allowed to direct
    enterprises.
  • Profit motive replaces political considerations
    as the guiding principle of business operations.
  • Profit-maximizing owners generally want to
    appoint managers and staff on merit rather than
    on the basis of political connections, for
    example.
  • Hypothesis Private enterprise is generally more
    efficient than state-owned enterprises.

29
The Model
We derive r r(v) by applying Romers model of
expanding product variety.
Start with optimal growth à la Ramsey
Then assume
Why?
with
  • SOEs may be inefficient, and may thus depend on
    low interest and little growth.
  • SOEs produce low-quality output, so that
    privatization increases quality (i.e.,
    efficiency) and growth.

30
What is the evidence?
31
Empirical Results
  • Correlation analysis
  • To explore the relationship between SOEs and
    relative productivity, investment, and education
  • Regression analysis
  • To attempt to provide a fuller picture of the
    interrelations among these variables

32
Sample of Countries
33
Correlation -0.40
34
Correlation -0.50
35
Correlation -0.58
36
Correlation -0.35
37
Interpretation
  • An increase in the SOEs employment share by 10
    percentage points is associated with a decrease
    in annual economic growth by almost 1.
  • A large SOE sector generally goes hand in hand
    with slow growth.
  • No country with an SOE sector accounting for more
    than 10 of employment had economic growth of 2
    per year or more.
  • Sole exception Côte dIvoire.

38
Regression Results
39
Regression Results
40
Regression Results
41
Regression Results
42
Regression Results
43
Regression Results
44
Regression Results
45
Regression Results
46
Summary of Results
  • An increase in SOE employment reduces investment
    and education and thereby also economic growth
    indirectly.
  • An increase in SOE labor share by 10 reduces
    growth by 1 (t 2.1).
  • An increase in SOE output reduces economic growth
    directly.
  • An increase in SOE output share by 10 reduces
    growth by 0.3 (t 2.1).
  • An increase in SOE debt reduces growth.

47
Conclusion
  • Across countries, SOE activity is inversely
    related to
  • Relative productivity of labor in SOE sector
  • Investment
  • Education
  • Economic growth 1978-1992 varies inversely with
    the size of the SOE sector.
  • An increase in SOE labor share by 10 reduces
    growth by 0.5 to 1 across countries, cet. par.
  • So, privatization may be good for growth.
  • But it needs to be implemented with care.
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