In Discussion Paper No. 1372 Micael Castanheira and Research
Fellow Gérard Roland focus on general equilibrium interactions
between capital accumulation and the speed of economy-wide
restructuring. They construct a general equilibrium model to analyse the
characteristics of the optimal path of transition under various utility
functions and intertemporal elasticities of substitution, and perform a
sensitivity analysis. In particular, the effects of adverse productivity
shocks on the state sector during the transition process are examined.
Economic intuition suggests that such shocks tend to always
accelerate the optimal rate of restructuring since they increase the
return to investment. It turns out that the opposite may be true when
such shocks occur at the beginning of transition. The reason is that
negative productivity shocks create an output contraction which has an
adverse effect on savings. This income effect may dominate the
substitution effect due to increased return to investment. An adverse
productivity shock occurring early in the transition may have important
macroeconomic contractionary effects, since it not only represents a
supply shock but, importantly, also leads to a slow down in investment
and the economy-wide process of restructuring and transition.
If policy-makers can influence the timing of productivity shocks by
sequencing reforms, the model suggests it is better to avoid adverse
productivity shocks too early in transition. This finding fits the
empirical observation of a strong output contraction in Central and
Eastern Europe as a result of trade and price liberalization as well as
of the break-up of the Soviet Union. In China, by contrast, where
liberalization was much more limited, an impressive and sustained
process of capital accumulation has occurred and structural shifts are
taking place in a context of high growth.
Restructuring and Capital Accumulation in Transition Economies: A
General Equilibrium Perspective
Micael Castanheira and Gérard Roland
Discussion Paper No. 1372, April 1996 (TE)