the guts of a gut: elements of a grand unified theory of growth
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The guts of a GUT: Elements of a Grand Unified Theory of Growth. Lant Pritchett LACEA November 12 th , 2010. Outline of the presentation. What is growth theory a theory of? The four facts a growth theory should explain - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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The guts of a GUT:Elements of a Grand Unified
Theory of GrowthLant Pritchett
LACEANovember 12th, 2010
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Outline of the presentation
• What is growth theory a theory of? The four facts a growth theory should explain
• Growth phases and phase transitions versus a single linear equation of motion
• “Institutions”: general or specific?• Equations of motion for “institutions” a la
Hirschman: “unbalanced growth” through “backward linkages” in institutions
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Four Facts about Growth• Small group of countries with sustained, non-
accelerating, stable growth of 1.8-2.0 ppa producing very high levels of output.
• Small group of countries very near subsistence (hence long-run growth near zero)
• Small group of countries with very rapid growth over extended periods
• Growth rates lack persistence over time—very low correlation of growth from one period to the next—growth is (mostly) an episodic condition (not a characteristic)
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First Fact: Long-run stability in growth among now leaders
• The growth rate 1870 to 2003 of the 16 leading countries is 1.89 ppa with std dev across countries of only .33
• Predicting US GDP per capita in 2003 using only data from 1870 through 1907 and the simplest possible linear trend in natural logs produces a forecast off by 2 percent ( 29,037 actual versus 28,242 predicted GK 1990 dollars)
• Median forecast error for 70 year ahead prediction of all leading countries from pre-depression data is 3.9 percent!
• The median acceleration of these 16 countries from 1890-1915 versus 1980-2003 is only .14 ppa
• High levels of per capita output produced by moderate, sustained, stable, non-accelerating growth.
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Long-run stability: example of US (Cover of Jones’s book on growth)
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Same figure, Denmark
Data 1890-1901 toestimate a trend
Predict 2003 levels—≈100 yearsahead—almost perfectly
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Fact II: Small number of countries very near subsistence (hence zero long-run growth)
• Can infer growth from level if you are willing to assume a minimum level of output—the “Adam and Eve” level
• The maximum growth could have been over any period is the growth that takes you from “Adam and Eve” at the beginning to the current observed level.
• Countries still near “Adam and Eve” levels implies slow growth—often very slow growth.
• Conversely one can ask when the leaders were at the currently observed levels
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Country
GDP per capita in 2003, GK 1990 units (Maddison 2007)
Maximum growth rate since 1870 (minimum=450)
Zaire (DRC) 212 -0.57%Burundi 477 0.04%Central African
Republic 511 0.10%Niger 518 0.11%Sierra Leone 579 0.19%Eritrea and Ethiopia 595 0.21%Guinea 601 0.22%Tanzania 610 0.23%Afghanistan 668 0.30%Zambia 689 0.32%Haiti 740 0.37%
Poorest countries in Maddison data (GK 1990 $) have cumulatively very slow growth
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Mapping current income into modern economic history (post 1820)
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Mapping the poorest countries into pre-modern history
Peace of Westphalia1648
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Fact III: A small number of countries have grown 27 (or more) years at very rapid rates—2 to 3
times higher than the historical pace of the leadersFastest 27 year episode in the recent (post 1950) data
JPN East Asia 1950 7.54%
BWA Africa 1963 7.29%
CHI East Asia 1980 7.16%
TWN East Asia 1961 7.05%
KOR East Asia 1970 6.74%
HKG East Asia 1960 6.29%
SGP East Asia 1963 6.19%
THA East Asia 1970 5.42%
MYS East Asia 1958 5.02%
BRA Latin America 1953 4.94%
IDN East Asia 1965 4.71%
COG Africa 1960 4.51%
VNM East Asia 1980 4.48%
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Extended rapid growth episodes are concentrated in two regions
(East Asia and Europe) Of the 21 fastest 27 year growth episodes in the PWT6.3
data:
10 are East Asia: Japan, China, Taiwan, Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam
8 are European (ish): Romania, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Austria, Italy, Israel (European ARS)
Only exceptions: Botswana, Brazil, Congo (?! go figure)
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Fact IV: Economic growth is (mostly) a condition of countries, not a
characteristic• Characteristics are relatively stable empirical features
—being left-handed, being tall (for people), having coast-line, speaking Spanish (for countries).
• Conditions are relatively impermanent empirical features—having a cold, being hungry (for people), having just won the World Cup, having recently had an earthquake (for countries).
• Characteristics have high persistence and high inter-temporal correlations (the left handed are left handed), conditions have low persistence and low inter-temporal correlations (people with colds are not “the colds”).
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Per capita growth is condition-like—R-squared of current growth on past growth is .05 at 5 year
horizons and less than .13 even at 25 year horizons–in contrast population growth is a
characteristic-like
0.0000.1000.2000.3000.4000.5000.6000.7000.800
5 10 15 20 25
Horizon (n) of t+n on t-n
R-S
quar
ed o
f gro
wth
on
past
gr
owth growth, gdp per capita
growth, population
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World distribution of N year growth rates across countries
World Distribution
Low growthCountry
Medium growthCountry
High growthCountry
What a “growth as Characteristic”world would look like
Growth Rate0 2 4
ProportionOf periods in Growth range
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Growth as a condition—countries change growth rates and span the
possible range of growth experiences
Medium growth country whichSpends more time in rapid growthand in slow growth than the worldDistribution of episodes
World Distribution
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Ghana—has more episodes of super-rapid growth and of negative growth
than the world distribution
More time in negative growth
More time in rapid growth
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How leaders grow—centered in the middle (e.g. Great Britain)
No rapidNo negative
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What stars look like…Singapore with lots of very rapid and no negative (pretty characteristic-like growth)
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What a consistently slow grower looks like (Niger)
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But countries with the exactly same growth rate have very different distributions—Colombia, overall
1.9 ppa—concentrated
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Chile—growth of 2.1 ppa—but with more bust and more boom—
roughly the world’s experience
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Brazil—overall 2.6 ppa—more boom, not so much bust, more stagnation
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Congo—grew “faster” (2.4 ppa) than Colombia or Chile—but most time was either
boom or bust
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What “the same” growth looks like
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Encompassing theory to explain all four facts
• Set of leading countries with steady growth around 2 ppa as an “absorbing” state
• Set of lagging countries with growth near zero (for a very long time)—(some consistently, others booms followed by busts)
• Set of countries with rapid growth (at least twice historical pace of leaders) for extended periods
• Lots of countries doing all of the above (negative and zero and moderate and rapid growth) back and forth in episodic fashion (e.g. discrete looking starts and stops)—averaged out to near non-converging growth on the leaders
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Big problem with a “unified” theory of growth
• “Institutions” are an important, causal, driver of levels of income (AJRobinson, Hall and Jones)—which we can identify because institutions have long persistence
• “Institutions Rule” in that they are claimed to drive out “policy” (e.g. Rodrik, Subramanian, and Trebbi, Easterly and Levine, AJRobinsonT)
• “Growth has low persistence” (Easterly et al.)• “Growth is episodic” with discrete starts and stops (Ben
David and Papell, Pritchett)• Accelerations and decelerations of growth are common
(Hausmann, et. al.) are common, even among poor countries (Jones and Olken)
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Measured rankings of aggregated components of quality of
“institutions” tend to be very stable
Indicator from ICRG Five year
periods1985-
961997-
091985-
09Bureaucratic
Quality 0.80 0.82 0.78 0.62
Corruption 0.71 0.70 0.70 0.58
Law and Order 0.77 0.64 0.81 0.58Democratic
Accountability 0.72 0.65 0.70 0.51
Socioeconomic Risk 0.67 0.47 0.73 0.63
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40
0.50
0.60
5 12
Horizon (years)
R-2
of c
urre
nt o
n pa
st"Institutions" Grow th
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Damn. Its both.
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What a single growth model (esp. single linear equation of motion)
cannot do• Most “determinants” of growth are characteristics (e.g. having a
coast, good “institutions”) have very high persistence, but growth has low persistence
• Related, most growth equations cannot predict the onset of episodes of either growth accelerations or growth decelerations (Hausmann, Pritchett, Rodrik)
• The magnitudes of growth dynamics are all out of whack with typical “micro” estimates—much larger total level “impacts” than would be predicted.
• Parameter instability is a specification test—and regressions fail• Standard growth models are getting worse as more and more is
“TFP”—the residual• Cannot distinguish between covariates that have impact “within
state” versus variables associated with higher/lower growth state transitions—e.g. do “institutions” play a role within states or with transitions across states?
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The problem
We now have a growth empirics (and some accompanying theories) that explains everything except precisely what we wanted a theory and empirics for—to tell us how to accelerate growth rates
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In waterfalls, water…well, it falls
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…except when it doesn’t: water has had a phase transition to ice
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Simple “states and transitions” simulations with chosen transition probabilities and constant within state growth dynamics can mimic all growth facts
Collapse Stagnation Moderate Rapid
gc(..) gS(..) gM(..) gR(..)
πCC(..) πCS(..) πCM(..) πCR(..)
πSC(..) πSS(..) πSM(..) πSR(..)
πMC(..) πMS(..) πMM(..) πMR(..)
πRC(..) πRS(..) πRM(..) πRR(..)Notation: πRC(..)—probability of transition from Rapid to Collapse,gi(..)—within state growth dynamics
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Two needs for a GUT of Growth
• A “states and transitions” model that can explain phase transitions across growth states (e.g. from stagnation to boom, from boom to crisis)—and why some countries but not others stay in growth booms.
• An equation of motion of “institutions”—how do “institutions” evolve to explain the four big facts of growth?
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“Institutions”: General or Specific?• While there are demonstrable general
differences between countries in the overall quality of institutions, there are also huge variances of institutions within countries
• The “quality” of the institutional environment as it affects specific industries (and/or firms) varies—the “institutions” for tea versus textiles versus pharmaceuticals
• Moreover, with weak institutions there is huge variances across firms—the “policy action” that is the results from the application of the policy depends on how it is chosen
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Do the rules matter more or less than deals? More variance across firms than across
countries
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“Favored” versus “Disfavored” firms have massively different experience—even with
the same rules• Comparing Doing Business indicators of three
different indicators from the Enterprise Surveys (e.g. days to get a construction permit, days to get an operating license, days to clear customs)
• Massive differences between the DB estimates and ES estimates in general
• Massive differences across firms—up to a year between 10th and 90th percentile in time to get construction permits
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Same country: Peru90th percentile a yearDB 210 days10th percentile 9 days
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Three levers to explain the world
• A “product space” with products arrayed conceptually according to the extent to which their “capability” or “functionality” inputs are similar
• The “receptivity” with which sector/firm performance translates into increased public action to augment capability
• The specificity of the “acceptable ask” in receptivity—person/firm specific to economy-wide (an element of politics which is “institutionally” constrained (or not)).
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An empirical product space (goods arrayed by how likely they are to be
co-exported)
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A simplified, conceptual product space arrayed by the similarity of “public action” inputs (laws,
regulations, infrastructure, skills, etc.)
Cluster of activities with similarPublic action inputs
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An industry produces when its “intrinsic” profitability (determined by technology,
endowments, world prices) plus contribution of public inputs exceeds a threshold—once in production it climbs up towards the potential
Cluster of activities with similarPublic action inputs
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So far, this is “Monkeys and Trees”—The second lever is the receptivity is how the public inputs
respond to production--first in height
Cluster of activities with similarPublic action inputs
Firms/industries who are producing use some of their revenue/profits to ask for additional public actions---better regulation, protection, specific inputs, tax breaks
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The third element is the “acceptable ask”—what is it that a firm/industry can lobby for? Possibilities?
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The third element is the “acceptable ask”—what is it that a firm/industry can lobby for? Only level
playing field—government is responsive, in principle, but only for “all actors” actions
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Moderate spillovers (to neighbors in this product space)
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Firm/industry specific ask—which could include harming (lowering profitability of) close competitors
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So, here is the dynamics: industry becomes “capable”, begins to expand output, attempts to pull up a tent after them, the shape of the tent is
constrained
Positive dynamic feedbackloop with (a) receptivity and(b) spillovers
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So, here is the dynamics: industry becomes “capable”, begins to expand output, attempts to pull up a tent after them, the shape of the tent is
constrained
Positive dynamic feedbackloop with (a) receptivity and(b) spillovers
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This is Hirschman(esque)• Hirschman’s “backward linkages”—but instead
of in a purely input/output space of market mediated demands leading to “integration” the “backward linkages” are in the public action space, mediated by politics (and hence the institutions of politics which construct both receptivity and acceptable ask
• “Uneven” development as it is the receptivity as output expands that finds/identifies the needs for public inputs—the “balanced growth” perspective cannot anticipate what is needed.
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Five Scenarios• Centered on remote section of product space—
so no feedback loop (a model of boom and bust due to politically/institutionally mediated resource curse).
• Acceptable ask is too narrow (oligarchic chimneys)
• No feedback because no activities to generate pressure (poverty trap)
• Less dense part, booms that peter out.• Dense part of product space, responsive,
limitations on “specificity” of lobbying
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Scenario I: Success in a part of the product space that is “remote” (institutionally determined spillover
to distance in product space)
Implications:
Growth spurt as economy moves up the industryStagnation afterwardsEconomy hinged to ups and downs in potential (e.g. terms of trade)Average “public input” quality never improves“Institutional quality” has high variance—greatInstitutions for tea/coffee/oil/gold
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Scenario II: Acceptable ask unconstrained—oligarchic chimneys—the “private sector” owns the state—and naturally hates competitive capitalism
(e.g. “Seize the state, seize the day”)• Bursts of rapid growth• Self-limiting• Variance increases (deals, not rules)• Average institutions do notimprove
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Scenario III: Threshold (far) exceeds existing contribution of public action inputs at intrinsic
profitability—a “Zombie” (Ghost country)
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Scenario IV: Production starts in moderately dense part—but doesn’t spread
• Larger/longer growth boom—mightonly peter out at medium income levels
• Might have high average level of public inputs (just not in dense part)
• “Institutions” might be middling (on average)
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Scenario V: “Sweet spot”—profitability in dense part of product space, government receptive, acceptable ask is constrained—everything is
possible
Positive dynamic feedbackloop with (a) receptivity and(b) spillovers
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Staying in the sweet spot for growth
• Dense parts of the (institutionally ordered) product space• Responsiveness of government to needs of emerging industries
(“high bandwidth” responsiveness)• Right level of spillovers of industry demand--tents steep enough to
generate reform, flat enough to not build oligarchic chimneys
Outcomes• (Potentially) rapid growth with S-curve dynamics into newly
profitable industries (within state dynamics faster or slower)• Small exogenous shocks (to profitability or capabilities) sets off
rapid growth with no change in overall “institutional quality”• Public inputs gradually expand so that measured “quality” across all
industries eventually re-converges
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Output/growth dynamics as move through product space: size and duration of boom determined by potential (and within state
dynamics)Level ofoutput Potential NR plus
little cluster plus bug cluster
Potential NR pluslittle cluster
Just NR
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Steady growth of leaders
Once at maximum capability growth constrained by expansion of potential (both new industries and moderate growth of existing)
Perpetually poor countries
Interaction of low “endowment” and poor public inputs—can be a long time
Rapid catch up Sweet spot of feedback (dense, receptive, limited ask)
Episodic growth with booms and busts
•Sparse part of product space•Oligarchic chimneys (weak institutions)•Level playing field too low (self-discovery)
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Long and Short of Growth Theory Unification
• In long-run (or cross section) prosperous countries have “high quality” institutions and poor countries have bad institutions
• In long-run prosperous countries produce in nearly all parts of the product space (since they have all capabilities) (not specialization)
• Small exogenous changes can make segments of the product space profitable—even with “weak” overall institutions (but policy reform might not)
• Some booms die and some survive—depending on the location in product space, receptivity, and acceptable ask—leading the observed variability with growth booms and busts (over and above pure resource boom/bust
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Four ways of staying in the sweet spot (experiences of rapid growers)• Pre-commitment to integration with higher
institutional quality regions (so that foreign players pressure institutions)
• Industrial policy through large industry groups
• Ordered deals as industrial policy• Keeping up with the zones’s
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Rapid Growers through pre-commitment? Periphery of Europe
(Greece, Italy, Portugal, Ireland, Spain)• Commitment to join “Europe” forced limitations
on the ability of domestic firms to lobby for “specific” benefits, even during periods of “weak” institutions
• Put pressure for better “level playing field” directly into policy decision making
• Other examples? (Caribbean states that remained pre-committed (e.g. Puerto Rico), more recently EU accession for early entrants (e.g. Poland), Hong Kong)
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Rapid Growers with “managed capitalism” (e.g. Japan, Korea)
• Industrial organization of large groups with interests in multiple sectors and organized inter-penetration of business and government at highest levels
• Inter-penetration allowed for “high bandwidth” responsiveness
• Multiple groups with opposing interests represented prevented oligarchic capture
• Performance driven by government
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Rapid growers with authoritarian corruption: “Ordered Deals” corruption
as industrial policy• Industrial policy is the differential favoring of
public inputs (of various kinds, including policy and/or its enforcement) across industries
• Corruption is the use of public authority for private gain
• Indonesia is a case where the combination of the two provided for rapid growth for 30 years as “ordered deals” were available for a modest number of selected industrial groups (e.g. military, family, some conglomerates)
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Replication of “good institutions” in a limited place: Keeping up with
the Zones’s• Create a favorable investment climate only
inside a greenhouse--firms inside a designated “space” (which may be conceptual, not geographic) get favored institutional environment
• Makes new activities possible• Is there a dynamic of replication and
responsiveness?• Other examples? (Mauritius (the 22nd fastest
grower), zone boomlets in other economies (e.g. Dominican Republic?)