Growth and structural change - Agricultural & Applied Economics

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2b: Growth and structural change

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Overview

 Stylized facts of economic structure and structural change

 Simple 2-sector models of economic structure & change

 Classical development theory: the dual economy

 Neoclassical two sector model

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Growth and structural change

 Growth inevitably involves change in product mix of production, demand and trade

 Growth causes structural change:

 in the sectoral composition of GDP

 in the allocation of labor and other resources

 in the distribution of income

 by factors (L, K, etc) by households (rural, urban, etc)

2

40

30

20

10

0

Structural change: ag share of GDP

Agriculture share in value-added (%)

60

50

Source: WDI

Indonesia

Malaysia

Philippines

Thailand

Vietnam

3

Structural change: industry share of GDP

Industry share in value-added (%)

30

20

10

0

60

50

40

Indonesia

Malaysia

Philippines

Thailand

Vietnam

Source: WDI

4

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

Changing composition of labor demand (1)

Agriculture share of total employment (%)

90

80

Indonesia

Lao PDR

Malaysia

Philippines

Thailand

Vietnam

5

35

30

25

20

15

10

5

0

Changing composition of labor demand (2)

Industry share in total employment (%)

40

Indonesia

Lao PDR

Malaysia

Philippines

Thailand

Vietnam

Source: WDI

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Growth & structural change: stylized facts

In the poorest countries, agriculture generates largest share of income, employment and trade revenues

The relative decline of agriculture is driven (in part) by economic expansion & growth of per capita income

Demand changes: Engel effects

Relative factor endowment growth rates (“Rybczinski effects”)

Relative factor productivity differentials

Policies & global markets may also play a role

 In general, poor countries tax agriculture to finance industrialization, reducing agr. profitability and investment

 Global market prices may signal incentives for some sectors to expand, others to contract

 Policies that increase international integration may matter

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Tools: sectoral production functions

 Aggregate production function Y = F ( K, L )

Sector (industry) level production function Y j = F j ( K j , L j ) , for all industries j

GDP (value-added):

 N j

1

P j Y j 

 N j

1

P j F j (K j L j )

Factor employment:

G

Total factor supply:

L , K

So full employment of factors constrains total output:

 Ex.: L



L 1 

L 2 

L 3 ...

supply constraints: production possibilities frontier



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Growth implies outward shift of PPF

Assume: M sector is K-intensive, A sector is L-intensive

Growth: factor accumulation: ΔK, ΔL, or technical progress

Equal rates of K and L accumulation

A

OR Equal rates of technical progress in both sectors

A

Faster rel. rate of K accumulation

OR faster technical progress in manufacturing sector

M

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M

Balanced growth at constant prices

Agriculture

C

D

‘Balanced growth’ line - no str. change

Manufacturing

Balanced growth: equal rates of K and L accumulation

--> equal growth rates of ag. & mfg. sectors

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Balanced growth at constant prices

Agriculture

C

D

‘Balanced growth’ line - no str. change

Rise in GDP, measured in terms of manufactures at constant prices

Manufacturing

11

Structural change at constant prices

Agriculture

C

E

Manufacturing

Unbalanced growth: faster rate of K accumulation

 faster relative growth rate of M sector.

• What happens to the composition of GNP?

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Price changes and structural change

Exogenous change in world market price ratio

Ex. Food price rise: p

A

’ > p

A

, so p

A

’/p

M

Alters optimal mix of goods produced

> p

A

/p

M

Endogenous changes

Engel effects: As incomes rise, budget share of food diminishes.

Domestic valuation of ag. relative to mfg. will decline; if prices are set in domestic markets, p

A

/p

M will decline

Policies that alter prices. Ex. tariff at rate t

M

: p

M

(1+t

M

) > p

M

, so p

A

/p

M

(1+t

M

) < p

A

/p

M

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Structural effects of price changes

Agriculture

E

C

Manufacturing

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Is full employment constraint realistic in a poor economy?

 Structural change stories are driven in part by the need to

‘give up’ factors from one sector in order to permit another to expand

 Assume full employment of factors

 Much ‘hidden’ unemployment in low-income economies

 Ex.: in Vietnam, many rural and unskilled workers report working less hours than they would like

 “Classical” development models did not assume full employment

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The dual economy model

 Examines growth and str. change of an economy with surplus labor in agriculture.

 Surplus labor: marginal product of labor in ag. is initially zero

 Output sharing: each ag. worker receives average product, not

marginal product, so wage in ag > marginal product of L

 Can withdraw some labor without reducing total ag. production

 Thus growth = expansion of industry, with unchanged ag. output (compare Rybczinksi)

 What happens to sectoral GDP shares?

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Development of the dual economy

Industry labor demands

Industry wage

D

1

L

1

M Wage in ag.

Subsistence ag wage = AP(L)

Total ag.output

(read from right to left)

Y

A

Labor in industry

Labor in ag.

f L

1

A g h 0

Labor in ag.

Industry wage

Industry labor demands

D

1

L

1

M

D

2

L

2

M

Wage in ag

Subsistence ag wage

Total ag.output

(read from right to left)

Y

A

Y

A f L

1

A L

2

A g

Labor in industry

Labor in ag.

h 0

Labor in ag.

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Industry wage

Industry labor demands

D

1

L

1

M

D

2

L

2

M

D

3

L

3

M Wage in ag

Subsistence ag wage

Total ag.output

(read from right to left)

Y

A

Y

A

Y

A

Labor in industry

Labor in ag.

f L

1

A L

2

A g L

3

A h 0

Labor in ag.

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Thoughts on dual economy

 “Traditional” vs. “modern” dichotomy; assumed

“irrationality” of behavior in former sector

 Origins in studies of SE Asia (Boeke; Higgins, 1950s)

 Alt. characterization: “traditional” sectors are constrained by mkt failures (esp. capital mkt) & by risk, social norms

 Dual development patterns consistent with this

 What kinds of data might verify DE assumption?

 What about income distribution as dual economy develops?

 Functional distbn = shares of income paid to labor, land, capital

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The neoclassical two sector model

Similar to “final” phase of Lewis model

No labor can be transferred without a reduction in ag. output

A stagnant agricultural sector, i.e., one with little new investment or technological progress, will cause wages of workers in industry to rise rapidly and thereby reduce profits and investment

Industry will develop successfully only if agriculture grows fast enough to catch up with higher levels of consumption and prevent the terms of trade from turning against industry

In the labor-surplus model, planners can ignore agricultural development until the surplus of labor is exhausted

But in the neoclassical model there must be a balance of growth rates between industry and agriculture

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Industry wage

Industry labor demands

D

1

L

1

M

D

2

L

2

M

D

3

L

3

M Wage in ag

Subsistence ag wage

Total ag.output

(read from right to left)

Y

A

Y

A

Y

A

Labor in industry

Labor in ag.

f L

1

A L

2

A g L

3

A h 0

Labor in ag.

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Prying open the Lewis and Solow models

 Why are product prices assumed fixed if producers sell only to the domestic market?

 Does industry growth really come only from domestic savings and investment?

Imports of capital goods and intermediates are important

How are these paid for? Natural resource exports

 Does structural change explain part of divergence?

 Product cycle: increasing capital-intensity in production delays diminishing returns to capital

 Depends on international markets with elastic demand

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