Medium-term Business Cycles in Developing Countries

Empirical evidence - including the current global crisis - suggests that shocks from advanced countries often have a disproportionate effect on developing economies. Can this account for the fact that aggregate fluctuations are larger and more persistent in the latter than in the former economies? And what are the mechanisms at play? This paper addresses these questions using a model of an industrial and a developing economy trading goods and assets, with (i) a product cycle shaping the range of intermediate goods used to produce new capital in each country, and (ii) investment adjustment costs in the developing economy. Innovation by the advanced economy results in new intermediate goods, at first produced at home, and eventually transferred to the developing economy through direct investment. The pace of innovation and technology transfer is driven by profitability. This process of technology diffusion creates a medium-term connection between both economies, over and above the short-term link through trade. Calibration of the model to match Mexico-United States trade and foreign direct investment flows shows that this mechanism can explain why shocks to the United States economy have a larger effect on Mexico than on the United States itself, and hence why Mexico shows higher volatility than the United States; why business cycles in the United States lead to medium-term fluctuations in Mexico; and why consumption is not less volatile than output in Mexico.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Comin, Diego, Loayza, Norman, Pasha, Farooq, Serven, Luis
Language:English
Published: 2009-12-01
Subjects:ADVANCED COUNTRIES, ADVANCED ECONOMY, ARBITRAGE, ASSET PRICE, BENCHMARK, BILATERAL TRADE, BUDGET CONSTRAINT, BUSINESS CYCLE, BUSINESS CYCLES, CAPITAL ACCUMULATION, CAPITAL FLOWS, CAPITAL FORMATION, CAPITAL GAINS, CAPITAL MARKETS, CAPITAL SHARE, CAPITAL STOCK, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, CONSUMERS, CREDIT MARKETS, CURRENCY, CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE, DECLINE IN INVESTMENT, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING COUNTRY, DEVELOPING ECONOMIES, DEVELOPING ECONOMY, DIVIDENDS, DOMESTIC INTEREST RATES, DURABLE, ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELASTICITY OF LABOR SUPPLY, ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION, EMERGING ECONOMIES, EMERGING MARKET, EMERGING MARKET BUSINESS, ENDOGENOUS VARIABLES, EQUILIBRIUM, EXCHANGE RATE, EXOGENOUS VARIABLES, EXPENDITURES, EXPORTERS, EXPORTS, FACTOR DEMAND, FACTORS OF PRODUCTION, FINANCIAL CRISES, FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT, FUTURE PRICE, GDP, GOVERNMENT SPENDING, GROWTH POTENTIAL, GROWTH RATE, GROWTH RATES, INSURANCE, INTEREST RATE, INTEREST RATES, INTERMEDIATE GOODS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL BORROWING, INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL, INTERNATIONAL CREDIT, INTERNATIONAL INSURANCE, INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENT, INTERNATIONAL LENDING, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, INVESTING, INVESTMENT DECISIONS, INVESTMENT FLOWS, LABOR MARKET, MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS, MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE, MACROECONOMICS, MARGINAL COST, MARGINAL COST OF PRODUCTION, MARGINAL COSTS, MARGINAL PRODUCT, MARKET ENTRY, MARKET ENTRY COSTS, MARKET EQUILIBRIUM, MARKET POWER, MARKET VALUE, OBSOLESCENCE, OPEN ECONOMY, OPTIMAL INVESTMENT, OUTPUT, OUTPUTS, OUTSOURCING, OVERHEAD COST, OVERHEAD COSTS, PATENTS, PERMANENT INCOME, POLITICAL ECONOMY, PRICE ELASTICITY, PRICE FLUCTUATIONS, PRIVATE CAPITAL, PRODUCTIVITY, RATE OF RETURN, REAL GDP, REAL INTEREST, REAL INTEREST RATES, RECESSION, RETURNS, RETURNS TO SCALE, SUNK COSTS, SUPPLIER, SURPLUS, TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE, TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER, TRADE BALANCE, TRADE BARRIERS, TRADES, TRADING, VOLATILITIES, VOLATILITY, WAGES, WHOLESALE PRICE,
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20091202115041
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/4338
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!