Quantifying economic resilience from input–output susceptibility to improve predictions of economic growth and recovery

被引:0
|
作者
Peter Klimek
Sebastian Poledna
Stefan Thurner
机构
[1] Medical University of Vienna,Section for Science of Complex Systems, CeMSIIS
[2] Complexity Science Hub Vienna,undefined
[3] IIASA,undefined
[4] Santa Fe Institute,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Modern macroeconomic theories were unable to foresee the last Great Recession and could neither predict its prolonged duration nor the recovery rate. They are based on supply−demand equilibria that do not exist during recessionary shocks. Here we focus on resilience as a nonequilibrium property of networked production systems and develop a linear response theory for input−output economics. By calibrating the framework to data from 56 industrial sectors in 43 countries between 2000 and 2014, we find that the susceptibility of individual industrial sectors to economic shocks varies greatly across countries, sectors, and time. We show that susceptibility-based growth predictions that take sector- and country-specific recovery into account, outperform—by far—standard econometric models. Our results are analytically rigorous, empirically testable, and flexible enough to address policy-relevant scenarios. We illustrate the latter by estimating the impact of recently imposed tariffs on US imports (steel and aluminum) on specific sectors across European countries.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Quantifying economic resilience from input-output susceptibility to improve predictions of economic growth and recovery
    Klimek, Peter
    Poledna, Sebastian
    Thurner, Stefan
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2019, 10 (1)
  • [2] Energy-economic recovery resilience with Input-Output linear programming models
    He, Peijun
    Tsan Sheng Ng
    Su, Bin
    [J]. ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2017, 68 : 177 - 191
  • [3] From Economic Recovery to Health Resilience
    Chokshi, Dave A.
    [J]. JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2021, 325 (08): : 710 - 711
  • [4] Predicting US county economic resilience from industry input-output accounts
    Han, Yicheol
    Goetz, Stephan J.
    [J]. APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2019, 51 (19) : 2019 - 2028
  • [5] Misallocation, Economic Growth, and Input-Output Economics
    Jones, Charles I.
    [J]. ADVANCES IN ECONOMICS AND ECONOMETRICS, VOL II: APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2013, (50): : 419 - 455
  • [6] An analysis of economic growth using input–output tables
    Mendoza M.A.M.
    [J]. Journal of Economic Structures, 12 (1)
  • [7] Dynamic Economic Resilience and Economic Recovery from Disasters: A Quantitative Assessment
    Xie, Wei
    Rose, Adam
    Li, Shantong
    He, Jianwu
    Li, Ning
    Ali, Tariq
    [J]. RISK ANALYSIS, 2018, 38 (06) : 1306 - 1318
  • [8] Malaysia: from economic recovery to sustained economic growth
    Thanoon, MAM
    Baharumshah, AZ
    Rahman, AAA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF POST KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS, 2005, 28 (02) : 295 - 315
  • [9] Tourism and economic growth nexus: an input output analysis in Turkey
    Atan, Sibel
    Arslanturk, Yalcin
    [J]. WORLD CONFERENCE ON BUSINESS, ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT (BEM-2012), 2012, 62 : 952 - 956
  • [10] Health Infrastructure in India: The Input and Output Association with Economic Growth
    Pradhan, Rudra Prakash
    Kumar, Manish
    Sanyal, G. S.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH MANAGEMENT, 2011, 13 (01) : 59 - 75