Causes and consequences of hysteresis: aggregate demand, productivity, and employment
Author(s) -
Giovanni Dosi,
Marcelo C. Pereira,
Andrea Roventini,
Maria Enrica Virgillito
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
industrial and corporate change
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.511
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1464-3650
pISSN - 0960-6491
DOI - 10.1093/icc/dty010
Subject(s) - economics , hysteresis , unemployment , productivity , aggregate demand , externality , creative destruction , investment (military) , demand shock , aggregate (composite) , product market , labour economics , insider , work (physics) , monetary economics , macroeconomics , microeconomics , monetary policy , market economy , incentive , mechanical engineering , physics , materials science , quantum mechanics , politics , political science , law , composite material , engineering
In this work we develop an agent-based model where hysteresis in major macroeconomic variables (e.g. GDP, productivity, unemployment) emerges out of the decentralized interactions of heterogeneous firms and workers. Building upon the model in Dosi et al. (2016, 2017), we specify an endogenous process of accumulation of workers’ skills and a state-dependent process of entry, studying their hysteretic impacts. Indeed, hysteresis is ubiquitous. However, this is not due to market imperfections, but rather to the very functioning of decentralised economies characterised by coordination externalities and dynamic increasing returns. So, contrary to the insider-outsider hypothesis (Blanchard and Summers, 1986), the model does not support the findings that rigid industrial relations may foster hysteretic behaviour in aggregate unemployment. On the contrary, in line with the recent discussion in Ball et al. (2014), this contribution provides evidence that during severe downturns, and thus declining aggregate demand, phenomena like lower investment and innovation rates, skills deterioration, and declining entry dynamics are better candidates to explain long-run unemployment spells and lower output growth. In that, more rigid labour markets dampen hysteretic dynamics by supporting aggregate demand, thus making the economy more resilient.
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