Microevidence of Labor Costs on Producer Prices

Microevidence of Labor Costs on Producer Prices

by Benjamin Schoefer (UC Berkeley) & Michael Weber (University of Chicago Booth School of Business)

How do changes in labor costs, including minimum wages, affect producer prices and ultimately inflation? The answer to this core question in macroeconomics and labor economics has proved elusive because of data constraints. This project exploits micro data underlying the Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index to construct a set of industry- and location-specific producer price indices. Those indices enable us to measure the pass-through of labor costs into producer prices in a series of new double and triple difference identification designs.

Topics

Development

Initiatives

International Trade & Development

Indirect Rule

Indirect Rule

By Raul Sanchez de la Sierra

For a draft of the paper, see here.

To rule populations of newly conquered territories, states have historically faced an institutional design problem. To collect taxes and tributes, for surveillance to avoid tax evasion and attempts to subvert their power, and to control disputes and justice, states often created their own administration – direct rule. Historically, however, a large number of states have ruled instead by delegating power to the traditional political institutions that pre-existed among the newly conquered peoples prior to their conquest – indirect rule (Claessen and Skalnik, 1978, Cohen and Service, 1978). This choice had important consequences for state development: while direct rule implies the creation of persistent administrative state capacity as documented by historians, indirect rule, however, does not. Furthermore, indirect rule has often had profound detrimental effects on the institutions in the long-run (Acemoglu, Chaves, Osafo-Kwaako, and Robinson, 2014). A fundamental challenge with existing cross-country empirical work is that the number of recorded country level episodes of this institutional change is small, and experiences are very context-dependent, so it has proven difficult to systematically understand the sources, or impacts, of indirect rule. We collect a novel dis- aggregated panel data set covering the histories of 1,200 Chiefs in 200 villages, and dozens of armed groups of eastern Congo since 1990, where 80 armed groups are active today, regularly expand their territory, and develop direct and indirect rule in different locations. We exploit variation over time and space of the institutions of rule created by armed groups and changes in the economic and political environment to explain when armed groups are more likely to develop their own administration to substitute for Chiefs (direct rule), the depth and duration of their administration, and when they create indirect rule instead. We further collect implicit association tests on households, and estimate the effect of indirect rule (and of direct rule) in the long-run, on the legitimacy of local authorities, the state, and the ruling military actor.

Topics

Development

Initiatives

International Trade & Development

E-Commerce Integration and Economic Development: Evidence from China

E-Commerce Integration and Economic Development: Evidence from China

by Ben Faber, Victor Couture, Lizhi Li and Yizhen Gu 

For a draft of the paper, see here.

The number of people buying and selling products online in China has grown from practically zero in 2000 to more than 400 million by 2015. Most of this growth has occurred in cities. In this context, the Chinese government recently announced the expansion of e-commerce to the countryside as a policy priority with the aim to close the rural-urban economic divide. As part of this agenda, the government entered a collaboration with one of the largest Chinese e-commerce platforms through which consumers and producers can buy and sell products of all kinds. The program aims to provide the necessary transport logistics to ship products to and sell products from tens of thousands of villages that were largely unconnected to e-commerce. As part of this operation, the firm installs an e-commerce terminal at a central village location where households can buy and sell products through the terminal manager’s account. This paper combines a new collection of survey and transaction microdata with a randomized control trial (RCT) across villages that we implement in collaboration with the Chinese e-commerce firm. We use this empirical setting to provide evidence on the potential of e-commerce integration to foster economic development in the countryside, the underlying channels and the distribution of the gains from e-commerce across households and villages. 

See poster here.

Topics

Development

Initiatives

International Trade & Development

Firm Dynamics and Cities

Firm Dynamics and Cities

by David Sraer & Cecile Gaubert

On average, firms are more productive in larger cities. The typical interpretation of this finding relies on a combination of a selection effect and agglomeration externalities. Empirically, these explanations have been tested in the context of static models (Combes et al. (2012)). This project will dig further into the question of the productivity advantage of large cities by considering the dynamics of firm productivity across cities. The selection effect documented in the literature can materialize both at firm entry (more productive entrepreneurs decide to start firms in larger cities) as well at firm exit (exiting firms have larger productivity in larger cities). Agglomeration externalities can affect the level of firm productivity, as is standard in the literature, but can also affect firm growth. This project builds on a very unique dataset, which consists of the exhaustive firm registry in France that records the location, industry and number of employee at creation of all firms registered in France between 1987 and 2007. The analysis will also rely on a model of firms entry, exit and dynamics a la Hopenhayn (1992), that includes agglomeration externalities, local labor markets as well as local competition for firms operating in the non-tradable sector. The model will highlight how agglomeration economies and firm selection shape the productivity distribution of firms operating in different cities, and in particular should help us derive an estimation strategy to recover the different parameters governing the model, such as the agglomeration externality parameter, the local demand parameters.
The hope is for this project to allow for a better understanding of agglomeration externalities, and in particular how they interact with firm dynamics. This is a novel aspect of this well-studied question. Beyond agglomeration externalities, decomposing more precisely where the productivity advantage of large cities is coming from is important from an urban policy perspective. The optimal design of public transfers to firms located in different cities may well depend on firm age, if cities affect firms differently at different point in their life-cycle. Addressing these questions is the purpose of this research project.

Topics

Development

Initiatives

International Trade & Development

Do Antitakeover Laws Affect Technological Change? International Evidence

Do Antitakeover Laws Affect Technological Change? International Evidence

by Ross Levine

Does removing impediments to corporate takeovers spur, slow, or have no effect on technological innovation? This research will provide the first international evaluation of whether and how antitakeover laws affect innovation. The research will use data on changes in laws governing corporate takeovers over the period from 1976 through 2006 for 97 countries. The research will use data on patents and citations to those patents to measure innovation. Preliminary results suggest that reducing legal and regulatory barriers to takeovers accelerates innovation.

Topics

Capital flows

Initiatives

Financial Globalization

E-Commerce Integration and Economic Development: Evidence from China

Managing Sudden Stops: Analytical Issues and Empirical Extensions

by Barry Eichengreen & Poonam Gupta

To access full paper, see here.

Sudden stops are when capital inflows dry up abruptly.  The banker’s aphorism – “it’s not speed that kills but the sudden stop” – has been popularly invoked since at least the Mexican crisis in 1994.  Awareness then rose with impetus from the Argentine crisis (1995), the Asian crisis (1997), the Russian crisis (1998), and the Brazilian crisis (1999).  Google’s Ngram Viewer shows a sharp increase after 2000 in references to the phrase.

The question is whether this increase reflects the growing incidence of the problem or simply the growing currency of the term.  The gradual diffusion of scholarly terminology suggests that the observed trend may simply reflect the latter.  At the same time, however, there is heightened awareness in the policy community of capital-flow volatility and reversals as reflected in the decision of the International Monetary Fund to adopt a new, more sympathetic view of capital controls and international capital market interventions generally (IMF 2012), indicative perhaps of a growing problem.  Episodes like the “taper tantrum” in 2013, when talk that the Federal Reserve might taper its purchases of securities, leading emerging-market currencies to crash, and the “normalization” episode in 2015, when expectations that the Fed would soon start raising U.S. interest rates, leading to an outflow of funds from emerging markets, suggest that sudden stops may in fact be growing more frequent or, perhaps, more disruptive.

In this paper we extend previous analyses of sudden stops, contrasting their incidence and severity before and after 2002, the end of the period covered by most of the classic contributions to the literature.   Our central contributions are two.  First, we update those earlier classic contributions, highlighting what if anything has changed in the decade or so since their initial publication. Second, we analyze the policy response, asking whether that response has evolved over time and, specifically, whether there is evidence of central banks and governments in emerging markets responding in ways that promise to better stabilize output, employment and, not least, domestic financial markets.

We show that the frequency and duration of sudden stops in emerging markets have remained largely unchanged since 2002.  Casual impression gleaned from the tapering episode in 2013 might suggest otherwise.  But excitable press coverage notwithstanding, we find that interruptions to capital flows during the Fed’s discussion and implementation of its policy of “tapering” security purchases were milder than the sudden stops of prior years. These episodes were shorter, entailed smaller reversals, and had a milder impact on financial and real variables.   One might call them “sudden pauses” rather than “sudden stops.”

At the same time, global factors appear to have become more important for the incidence of sudden stops.  Similarly, when we consider a measure of contagion or concurrence such as the number of sudden stops occurring simultaneously in other countries, we find that it is sudden stops globally that matter after 2002, whereas in the preceding period it had been sudden stops in the same region as the country in question that had the most statistical power.  Again, we are inclined to interpret this in terms of the growing importance of global factors.

See poster.

Topics

Capital flows

Initiatives

Financial Globalization