Transcript Slide 1

Comments on:
“Modelling the Lisbon Strategy: Analysing Structural
Reforms in the EU using the QUEST III model”
by
Roeger, Varga and Veld
Vedran Šošić, CNB
Motivation
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Estimate the possible impact of policies that have the
potential of closing the productivity gap with respect to
the US (via knowledge generation and innovation)
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Testing the impact of policy proposals framed at EU level
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No “deep” insight into the causes of the productivity gap
 Using simple “benchmarking” exercise to identify differences
between the US and EU in the R&D sector
Estimates Rely on the QUEST III Model
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Heavily used in different incarnations over the previous
decade for simulations of different shocks/policy options:
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Macroeconomic shocks (monetary and fiscal policy shocks,
permanent supply shocks, productivity shock, shock to the
reservation wage)
Income tax reforms in member states
EU structural policy
Other (avian flu)
Strain of “general practice models” – able to address a
broad range of policy issues, but not specifically
designed to deal with all of them – therefore not so easy
to introduce each specific policy
The model should come with a user’s manual!
Discussed Policy Options
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One set of policies mentioned in the introduction,
another actually discussed?! (Maybe due to missing
chapter 4.3?)
Actually discussed policies:
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Subsidizing R&D investments (via tax credit)
Increasing competition in services (reduction of mark-ups)
Reducing entry barriers for new firms
 Reducing high financing costs for start ups
 Reducing administrative entry barriers
Increasing the share of highly skilled workers (by boosting
immigration of the highly skilled)
Implementation of the Policies Into the
Model
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Mapping of the policies to specific variables into the
model is not unique
 The way variables are modified to aacount for policies allow for a
wide range of possible alternatives
 The model does not show any preference between specific
measures (e.g. How to reduce mark-up in services)
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The criterion for selection of policy options not entirely
clear
 Testing a battery of different policy options would probably give a
better idea of the optimal policies, some policies could be
superior to others
e.g. What is the optimal ratio of research to production
employment and what are the best policy options to get there
Tax Credits
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R&D subsidies increase GDP
but
Differences in R&D subsidies do not explain much of the
gap
Model well placed for such simulation because of great
detail in modelling the R&D sector
Reducing Mark-ups in the Services
Sector
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Reduction of mark-ups in the services (final goods)
sector by 1 pp increases GDP by about 1%
Identified with the completion of the internal market in
services
Possible effects of completing the internal market in
services probably still open to debate – what about other
policy options (e.g. reform of the product market
regulation, zoning regulations, etc.)?
Entry Barriers for New Firms
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High financing costs for start ups
Authors admit having the most problems with fitting
financing constraint into the model (policy equivalent of
supporting venture capital)
Performed through reduction of risk premium
 This reduces financing costs, but whether it simulates more
developed financial system?
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EU financial system highly developed
 Venture capital surely important, but it is not clear why such a
large reduction of risk premium can be expected from a fairly
small increase in the size of the venture capital
Entry Barriers II
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Administrative barriers - modelled as “fixed entry costs”
(or sunk costs)
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Fairly stragihforward and common way
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Fixed entry costs are not real entry barriers in the sense
of Stigler (1968) if newcomers bear the same costs as
the incumbents
Skills and Immigration
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Impact of more generous (but selective) immigration
policy found to be positive
Process of human capital formation could potentially be
important for explaining the dynamics of the productivity
gap vs. the US, but skill composition of the workforce is
exogenously fixed
With 100 years forecasting horizon, human capital
formation will probably depend on some of the
endogenous variables, such as wage skill premium or
skill specific unemployment rates, which also change
(migrations probably also affected by similar variables)
Also, Europe does not perform badly in education - what
is behind the skill gap?
Ratio of Science and Engineering PhDs From
Non-us Universities to Those From US
Universities
Source: Freeman (2005)
Source: ECFIN/EPC (2006)
What Else?
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Some discussion on sensitivity analysis would be useful
 E.g. What would happen to the results if the proportion of
financially constrained households is modified?
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What are the implications of more radical change in
assumptions - it would be useful to compare the results
with alternative models
 Bradley and Untiedt (2007) perform such an exercise for the
analysis of the impacts of cohesion policy and find dramatic
differences in implications of different models
To Conclude
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Policy areas found to be most promising also have most
problems with implementation into the model (mark-ups
and barriers)
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“Build a basement before you build an attic”
...or “think before you jump”
For the future QUEST version 4, it could be useful to
compile a list of important policy issues before building a
model
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