Title: Presentazione di PowerPoint
1PHARE TWINNING CZ 2002/IB SPP/03 Joint Regional
Operational Programme and Community Support
Framework Building Implementation Capacity
Regional economic modelling for dualistic
countries the case of the Mezzogiorno
2Guido Pellegrini, University of Bologna and
Ministry of the Economy and Finance Stefania
Rossi, University of Cagliari and Ministry of the
Economy and Finance Ornella Tarola, University of
Roma La Sapienza and Ministry of the Economy
and Finance Seminar on Macroeconomic Modelling
and CSF Policy Analysis Salone UVAL, Rome, 19th
September 2002
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
3The econometric model for the Mezzogiorno (MOMEZ)
- The econometric Model for the Mezzogiorno
(MOMEZ) has been built in the Department for
Development and Cohesion Policies, as an
instrument for the evaluation of the impact of
the PSM (Mezzogiorno Development Plan, now QCS)
on growth of Southern regions in Italy
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
4The old version of MOMEZ
- A former version of MOMEZ (2000) has been used
- for the macroeconomic ex ante evaluation of the
PSM and the impact of CSF - for testing the consistence between the policy
targets and macroeconomic constraints.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
5The new model (2002)
- The new model preserves the basic features of the
former one - The model captures the main growth mechanisms of
the developing areas of a dualistic economy and
selects the principal transmission channels of
public policies. - It is an instrument for policy evaluation, built
up to give a quantitative appraisal of the
effects of externalities generated by the QCS on
the accumulation process in the Mezzogiorno. - The model is focused on the supply side.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
6New features of MOMEZ
- sectoral disaggregation
- different multipliers of heterogeneous types of
public expenditure (infrastructures, state aids) - an aggregate consumption function estimation
- the growth mechanism - based on the accumulation
of physical capital - is enriched with a new
specification, involving human capital and
complementarities between physical capital and
labour.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
7This is a provisional version
- The new model is still work in progress and
the version presented here is largely
provisional - the specification of some equations is not
complete (especially for the labour market) - other multipliers have to be analysed
- the whole set of scenarios has still to be
built. - So, comments are welcome!Â
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
8INDEX OF THE PRESENTATION
- Today we focus on
- Issues in setting a regional model for evaluation
in a dualistic economy - The theoretical framework and the specification
of some equations - Some very preliminary results about the main
multipliers and elasticities.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
9MOMEZ and QCS
- MOMEZ is strictly linked to the QCS and its
logic. - The basic idea of the QCS (and of the model)
is that growth comes from the effects of actions
on the economic and social contest, that lead to
an increase in productivity. This induces the
accumulation of human and physical capital, and
increases output. - Changes in expectations and in the social and
economic environment can be captured by some
specific indicators that are named in QCS and in
MOMEZ as break-trough variables.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
10The break trough variables (1)
- These variables have been chosen as they appear
to have improved significantly in areas in which
signals of remarkable local development appeared
after the end of the old regional policies in
Italy. - In MOMEZ, the exogenous break-trough variables
are included in the productivity estimation, in
order to capture expected radical changes in
agents behaviour and expectations.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
11The break trough variables (2)
- They are endogenous to the model (4 exports, net
imports, investments, participation rate) or
exogenous (9 tourist inflow, direct investment
from abroad, irregular employment, social
services employment, specialized good exports,
technological specialization, business services
employment, interest rate gap with the North,
crime )
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
12The break trough variables (3)
- In MOMEZ, the growth pattern of the exogenous
break-trough variables is estimated by - Experts forecasts
- Based on CSF allocation
- Using the catching up with the Northern regions
assumption
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
13Issues in model setting
- Estimating a regional econometric model for
evaluation in a dualistic economy requires to
deal with several issues - statistical issues
- theoretical issues
- econometric issues.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
14Statistical problems (1)
- Main problem the availability of detailed
regional data at high frequencies. The new SEC
data cannot fulfil all the needs - NUTS2 data are related basically to regional
accounts at annual frequencies - For some variables, like investment, the location
is determined by the ownership rather than the
use. - Several structural territorial information are
available only at Census data.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
15Statistical problems (2)
- We need also sectoral disaggregated data
sectoral patterns and transmission channels are
different in a take off - Therefore, we built a quite detailed sectoral
data base, disaggregated in 4 sectors
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
16Theoretical framework (1)
- A theoretically founded model should include an
accumulation equation related to different
production factors. - A developing area suffers not only shortage of
physical capital, but also a mismatch in human
capital the stronger the complementarity
between physical and human capital the wider the
gap. This can explain why the relevant production
constraints come from the supply side rather than
the demand side.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
17Theoretical framework (2)
- In the medium-long run the crucial bottleneck in
growth is the endowment of production factors. - The model is designed also to capture the effects
of QCS intervention, that are mainly in areas
such as infrastructure, human capital, and
productivity. - The choice is therefore in favour of a
supply-oriented model, with a central role played
by accumulation mechanisms.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
18Theoretical framework (3)
- The relevance of the demand factors should not be
underestimated, mainly in the short run. - The central question is a peripheral area, with
a poor endowment of physical and social capital,
could develop its demand or rather its resources
could be absorbed by richer, core areas ? - Answer the South and its captive markets are
too large and geographically not too open to be
simply depleted from outside, even if temporary
disequilibria have to be considered.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
19Econometric issues (1)
- Big issue the econometric way of modelling the
economic take off of a group of adjacent regions.
- If a local economy takes off, the behaviour and
the expectations of agents in the area change
radically with respect to the past. - Therefore, the parameters of a model describing
the previous behaviour of the economy will also
change. Technically, here the Lucas critique
clearly applies. And data on structural changes
are not available.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
20Econometric issues (2)
- There are two ways to tackle this problem
- to follow Lucas critique and identify the deep
parameters modelling expectations in an explicit
way - To use a calibration technique which relies on
parameters estimated in a different context. - In our analysis we employ both of these
approaches.
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
21Econometric issues (3)
- We include break-trough variables in production
equations and several break-trough variables in
TFP equation, assuming that changes in
expectations and behaviours of agents in the
South - captured by those variables - can
positively affect productivity and output
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
22Econometric issues (4)
- For other break-trough variables, for which
time series were not available, we have
calibrated the coefficients in the productivity
equation (TFP) on the basis of external
information (mainly cross section).
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
23WHAT THE MODEL IS NOT
- Â Â Â It is not a tool designed for forecasting,
because it is not oriented to the short term
analysis - Â
- Â It is not a tool built up to analyze the
Southern economy, because not all the
transmission channels are taken into account.
Overall, the model has not a price circle,
because our assumption is that this adjustment
mechanism is not so important in the Mezzogiorno
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
24MULTIPLIER ANALYSIS
- The true test of the model is in the
evaluation of the impact of several shocks. - We use a standard procedure, shocking some
exogenous variables and comparing the results
with a baseline solution. This procedure allows
us to empirically calculate the multipliers and
to show the long run properties of the model. - This is basically a test of theoretical and
empirical consistence of the model. - Â
- .
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
25MULTIPLIER ANALYSIS 2
- . The variables are shocked starting from the
2002. In order to compensate for a poor fit of
the equations near the end of the time series,
we use add factors - for the last 5 years of the
series - in all behavioural equations, both in
the baseline and the alternative scenario. - Here we present the effects of the shocks on
GDP, employment, trade balance and investment in
the Mezzogiorno - Â
- .
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
26Shock on world demand
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
27Shock on North GDP
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
28Shock on external demand
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
29Shock on public investment
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
30Shock on state aids
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
31Shock on policy variables
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS
32Shock on TFP
SEMINAR ON MACROECONOMIC MODELLING AND CSF POLICY
ANALYSIS