Demand-Led Growth and Accommodating Supply*

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Demand-Led Growth and Accommodating Supply* Steven Fazzari, Washington University in St. Louis Piero Ferri, University of Bergamo (Italy) AnnaMaria Variato, University of Bergamo (Italy) This version, December 2017 Abstract This paper presents a supermultiplier model in which the growth of autonomous demand (demand independent of the state of the economy) determines the steady-state growth rate of output. With reasonable parameters, endogenous adjustment of labor supply and productivity causes supply to accommodate the demand-led growth path, reconciling Harrod s warranted rate of demand growth with the growth of supply. The model delivers a range of feasible aggregate growth paths and unemployment rates rather than a single natural rate. The results explain how economies can become trapped with low growth due to weak demand or fiscal austerity and suggest policy responses to secular stagnation. Key words: demand-led growth, autonomous demand, supermultiplier, aggregate demand and supply reconciliation, secular stagnation. JEL codes: E12, O40, E32

Basic Model Three components of demand: consumption, investment, and autonomous Consumption depends on expected income Investment depends on production necessary to meet expected demand Output equals demand if demand < potential output Y! = min (Y!!, Y!! ) 1

Dynamics of Demand Growth Growth follows demand. The law of motion for demand Y!! = 1 s 1 + Eg! Y!!! + v!!! 1 + Eg!! Y!!! K! 1 δ + F! Big result #1: Steady-state growth rate equals the growth rate of autonomous demand Output along steady-state path determined by a multiplier formula: Y! = 1 s v g + δ F! 2

Dynamics of Endogenous Supply Growth Linear production (constant marginal cost, flat FM curve) Y!! = A! L! Labor supply growth is related to the unemployment rate g!!" = θ! θ! u!!! The growth rate of the labor productivity as a function of the unemployment rate and the replacement rate of the capital stock g!! = ρ! ρ! u!!! + ρ! g!!!! + δ 3

Demand Leads Supply The unemployment rate that yields a constant rate of supply growth (where g is the growth rate of autonomous demand) u = θ! + ρ! g (1 ρ! ) + ρ! δ θ! + ρ! In steady state, the constant rate of supply growth will equal demand growth Big result #2: Changes in the growth rate of autonomous demand can, within bounds, affect the growth rate of aggregate supply. Suppose that g increases. The equation above shows that u will decline. If the dynamics of the model are stable, supply growth will converge to the higher level of g driven by a lower level of u. Demand growth leads supply growth! 4

Supply-Side Limits on Demand Expansion What are the limits to this virtuous circle? The unemployment rate is bounded below. Suppose this minimum is u. Then the maximum autonomous growth rate that can be accommodated by steady-state supply growth is: g = θ! + ρ! + ρ! δ u(θ! + ρ! ) 1 ρ! The production demand growth can induce is ultimately limited by supply-side factors. 5

Some Economic Implications Demand growth below maximum rate g will drag supply growth and potential output down with it. The output gap may disappear (Y=Y*) but the economy could do better with stronger demand dynamics. Weak demand growth always reduces supply beyond the short run. Realistic empirical calibration: consider an economy with stagnant growth of 1.5 percent and unemployment of 6 percent. A one percentage point increase in autonomous demand growth will raise the overall growth rate to a much more favorable 2.5 percent. To induce supply growth to adapt to the higher demand path, unemployment must decline to 4 percent. Possibility of secular stagnation with weak demand dynamics; apply to recovery from the Great Recession. 6

Some Policy Implications Government demand an important part of autonomous growth. Difficult for the economy to grow quickly with slow or declining government spending. Ultimate supply-side limits on the maximum growth rate are due to population in the labor force and productivity. Want more growth? Encourage immigration and technical progress. But make sure to stimulate demand. o Productivity and labor force growth without corresponding demand stimulus raises unemployment and slows the supply side. (One source of Trump s success.) 7