Geo-Economics and Politics

Will advanced economies return to steady growth?

Jérémie Cohen-Setton
Affiliate fellow, Bruegel
Share:
Our Impact
What's the World Economic Forum doing to accelerate action on Geo-Economics and Politics?
The Big Picture
Explore and monitor how Geo-economics is affecting economies, industries and global issues
A hand holding a looking glass by a lake
Crowdsource Innovation
Get involved with our crowdsourced digital platform to deliver impact at scale
Stay up to date:

Geo-economics

What’s at stake: The question of whether capitalist economies are self-correcting and will eventually revert to mean growth has received renewed interest given the underperformance of most economies six years after the onset of the Great Recessions. While the idea of persistent high unemployment was central to Keynes’ General Theory, it was quickly abandoned by the neoclassical synthesis.

Tyler Cowen writes that the most crucial issue is whether economies will return to normal conditions of steady growth, or whether we are witnessing a fundamental transformation, unveiled in bits and pieces. One relatively optimistic view is that observed deficiencies — like slow growth in real wages and the overall economy, persistently low interest rates and low levels of labor participation — are merely temporary.  Another commonly heard view is that we made the mistake of letting the last recession linger too long, allowing some of its features to become entrenched.

Unit roots, random walks and stationary series

John Cochrane provides a simple illustration of the different concepts. Suppose there is an unexpected movement in a series. How does this “shock” affect our best estimate of where this variable will be in the future? The graph shows three possibilities. First, green or “stationary.”  There may be some short-lived dynamics. But, given enough time, the variable will return to where we thought it was going all along. Second, blue or “pure random walk.” If the price goes up unexpectedly, your expectation of where the (log) price will be in the future goes up one-for-one, for all time. Third, black, “unit root.” This option recognizes the possibility that a shock may give rise to transitory dynamics, and may come back towards, but not all the way towards your previous estimate. As you can see the “unit root” is the same as a combination of a stationary component and a bit of a random walk.

150519-unexpected movement graphSource: John Cochrane

John Cochrane writes that the pure question whether the series will come back in an infinite time period is not really knowable. It could be that the series will come back eventually, but take a very long time. It could be stationary plus a second very slow moving stationary component. This is a statistical problem but not really an economic problem. The appearance of unit roots are economically interesting as they show a lot of “low frequency” movement, series that are coming back slowly – even if they do come back eventually.

History of an idea: high unemployment as a persistent equilibrium

Roger Farmer writes that classical economists from David Hume, through to Adam Smith, David Ricardo and John Maynard Keynes’ contemporary, Arthur Pigou, viewed the economy as a self-regulating mechanism. In the third edition of his undergraduate textbook, Samuelson replaced Keynes’ notion, of high unemployment as an equilibrium, with a new idea: the neoclassical synthesis. According to that idea, the Keynesian high unemployment equilibrium is only temporary. It applies in the short run, when prices and wages are sticky, but in the long run, when all wages and prices have had time to adjust, the economy reverts to a classical equilibrium with full employment.

Roger Farmer writes that Keynesians and monetarists adopted the Phillips curve as the missing equation that explains the transition from the short run to the long run. If the neoclassical synthesis is correct then the economy will always return to full employment as wages and prices adjust to clear markets. Unemployment cannot differ permanently from its natural rate and Keynes’ original vision of high unemployment, as a persistent steady state, must be fatally flawed.

The data: stationary or not?

Arnold Kling writes that if you think of the economy as ultimately self-correcting, then what it corrects to is potential GDP. If the economy is not self-correcting, then the concept of potential GDP can have no objective basis.

Roger Farmer writes that there is no evidence the economy is self-correcting. If, as Robert Gordon believes, it is caused by random technology shifts then there is not much that monetary policy or macro prudential policies can do about it. If, however, it is caused by random movements from one inefficient equilibrium to another, we should be thinking very hard about how to design a monetary/macro-prudential policy that keeps the economic train on the tracks.

John Cochrane writes that the “unit root” is most plausible and verified in the data for log GDP. Recessions and expansions have a lot of transitory component that will come back. But there are permanent movements too. Unemployment, being a ratio, strikes me as one that eventually must come back. But it can take a longer time than we usually think, which is interesting.

Paul Krugman writes that clearly, models with rational expectations, markets continuously in equilibrium, and unique equilibria don’t cut it. But which pieces of such models would you want to modify or replace? Farmer wants to preserve rational expectations and continuous equilibrium, while introducing multiple equilibria. That strikes me as a bizarre choice. Why not appeal to behavioral economics, behavioral finance in particular, to make sense of bubbles? Why not appeal to the clear evidence of price and wage stickiness — perhaps grounded in bounded rationality — to make sense of market disequilibrium?

This article was originally published by Bruegel, the Brussels-based think tank. Read the article on their website here. Publication does not imply endorsement of views by the World Economic Forum.

To keep up with the Agenda subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

Author: Jérémie Cohen-Setton is a PhD candidate in Economics at U.C. Berkeley and a summer associate intern at Goldman Sachs Global Economic Research.

Image: A man walks past buildings at the central business district of Singapore. REUTERS/Nicky Loh.

Don't miss any update on this topic

Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.

Sign up for free

License and Republishing

World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

Related topics:
Geo-Economics and PoliticsEconomic Growth
Share:
World Economic Forum logo
Global Agenda

The Agenda Weekly

A weekly update of the most important issues driving the global agenda

Subscribe today

You can unsubscribe at any time using the link in our emails. For more details, review our privacy policy.

'The Centre Must Hold' - can centrism compete with the emotional pull of populism?

Robin Pomeroy

July 18, 2024

About Us

Events

Media

Partners & Members

  • Sign in
  • Join Us

Language Editions

Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

© 2024 World Economic Forum