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Business Cycle Accounting: China vs. India

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Title: Business Cycle Accounting: China vs. India


1
Business Cycle Accounting China vs. India
  • Christer Ljungwall and Gao Xu

China Center for Economic Research, CCER, and
the Stockholm School of Economics. World Bank
Office, Beijing, China (EASPR). The findings,
interpretations, and conclusions expressed in
this paper are entirely those of the authors.
They do not necessarily represent the view of the
World Bank, its Executive Directors, or the
countries they represent.
2
Outline
  • Motivation
  • Literature Review
  • Quantitative Method (Business Cycle Accounting)
  • Benchmark Model
  • Accounting Procedures
  • Empirical Findings
  • Comparison of Business Cycle Facts
  • Comparison of Business Cycle Accounting Results
  • Conclusions

3
Motivation
  • The rise of China and India is one of the most
    significant economic developments in nowadays
  • Great achievement of human development better
    life for 1/3 of world population
  • Major representatives of emerging markets BRIC
  • Big players in the global market made-in-China,
    service outsourcing into India
  • Similar development path of China and India
  • Start point planned economy of China and rigid
    state control in India
  • Market oriented reform and integration into the
    world economy

4
Motivation
  • Differences between China and India
  • Average growth 9.8 of China vs. 3.4 of India
  • Investment-led growth pattern of China vs.
    consumption-led growth in India
  • Strong competitiveness of Chinas manufacturing
    sector vs. advantages of service outsourcing in
    India
  • It is of both theoretic and practical interest to
    compare China and India within a rigorous
    quantitative framework

5
Literature Review
  • Business Cycle Accounting (BCA)
  • Proposed by Mulligan(2002) and Chari, Kehoe and
    McGratten (2007)
  • A DSGE model with time varying wedges
  • Measure the wedges so the model replicates data
    exactly.
  • Inspect measured wedges to analysis shocks.
  • Application Chakraborty (2004), Kobayashi and
    Inaba (2006) to investigate Japans recession.
    Lama (2005) used it to identify business cycle
    sources for Argentina, Brazil and Mexico.
    Cavalcanti (2004)

6
Literature Review
  • Business cycle research on Chinese economy
  • Descriptive study and summary statistic
    calculations Qian (2004), Lu and Qi (2006), Liu
    (2006)
  • SVAR Zhang and Wan (2005), Xu (2007)
  • Little quantitative research on Indian business
    cycle fluctuation

7
Benchmark Model
  • Model setup
  • Household
  • Firm
  • Resource constraint

8
Benchmark Model
  • Four wedges (shocks)
  • Efficiency wedge
  • frictions which cause inputs to be used
    inefficiently
  • investment wedge
  • financial frictions, etc.
  • labor wedge
  • sticky wage, powerful labor union, etc.
  • government (exogenous demand) wedge
  • government consumption, net exports

9
Benchmark Model
  • Equilibrium conditions
  • Optimal condition for consumption-leisure choice
  • Euler equation
  • Production technology
  • Resource constraint

10
Accounting Procedures
  • Shocks
  • Estimation of wedges
  • Log-linearize equilibrium conditions
  • Solve linearized system with Blanchard-Kahn
    (1980) method
  • Use Kalman filter to write likelihood function
  • Estimate parameters with MLE combined with prior
    from long-run relationships (Bayesian approach)
  • Estimate wedges with Kalman smoothing algorithm

11
Accounting Procedures
  • Counterfactual experiments
  • Marginal effect of each wedge let one wedge
    fluctuate and keep the rest fixed, and simulate.
  • Effect of a combination of wedges let a subset
    of wedges fluctuate and keep the rest fixed, and
    simulate.
  • Data
  • Annual GDP by expenditure data, deflate nominal
    variables with GDP deflator to construct real
    series.
  • 4 observation series (to avoid singularity
    problem) GDP, private consumption, investment,
    government consumption plus net exports (all are
    log deviations from their HP trends).

12
Comparison of Business cycle Facts
  • Growth rate
  • China high and persistent
  • India relatively low

13
Comparison of Business cycle Facts
  • Expenditure structure
  • China significant role of investment
  • India predominant role of private consumption
  • Similarity Shrinking relative size of private
    consumption

14
Comparison of Business cycle Facts
  • Business cycle fluctuation
  • China big output fluctuation, even bigger
    consumption volatility, high output persistence,
    investment lag output
  • India small output fluctuation, smaller
    consumption volatility, less output persistence,
    investment co-moves with output

15
Comparison of BCA Results
16
Comparison of BCA Results
17
Comparison of BCA Results
  • Main driving force in both countries efficiency
    wedge (Solow residual)
  • Important role played by technology advances and
    infrastructure change
  • Missing factors of RBC model
  • Bigger damping effect of labor wedge points to
    more labor market rigidities in India
  • Ignorable roles played by financial frictions and
    government consumption in both countries

18
Conclusions
  • Both of China and Indias business cycle
    fluctuations are mainly driven by efficiency
    wedge (including technology advance and
    institutional change)
  • More rigid labor market (sticky wage and powerful
    labor union) is spotted in India
  • Minor roles played by financial frictions and
    government consumption in both countries

19
  • Thanks!
  • comments welcome
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