The medium-term effects of investment stimulus Rubén Domínguez-Díaz, Samuel Hurtado, Carolina Menéndez [Recurso electrónico]
Por: Domínguez-Díaz, Rubén.
Colaborador(es): Hurtado, Samuel | Menéndez, Carolina.
Tipo de material: TextoSeries Documentos de trabajo 2402.Editor: Madrid : Banco de España , 2024Descripción: 47 p.Tema(s): Next Generation EU | Crecimiento económico | Desarrollo económico | EspañaRecursos en línea: DESCARGAR DOCUMENTO Resumen: This paper presents an endogenous growth general equilibrium model (EGGEM) of firm dynamics and innovative investment for the Spanish economy that allows the medium-term effects of economic policies and shocks to be better understood. The model is calibrated using both aggregate and firm-level data. It is then used to assess the medium-term macroeconomic consequences of the different components of the Next Generation EU (NGEU) programme, including public investment, private capital transfers and innovative investment transfers. According to our baseline simulation, the NGEU funds significantly foster economic activity by raising aggregate productivity, private investment and employment. As a result, annual GDP growth is increased by 0.17 percentage points on average over the period of NGEU disbursement. Among the different policy instruments considered, we find that innovation transfers have the largest impact on aggregate output, only matched by increases in the stock of public capital if it is highly efficient.Biblioteca actual | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | Reserva de ítems |
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Biblioteca Central del Ministerio de la Presidencia Recurso electrónico | En línea | No para préstamo |
Incluye referencias bibliográficas.
This paper presents an endogenous growth general equilibrium model (EGGEM) of firm dynamics and innovative investment for the Spanish economy that allows the medium-term effects of economic policies and shocks to be better understood. The model is calibrated using both aggregate and firm-level data. It is then used to assess the medium-term macroeconomic consequences of the different components of the Next Generation EU (NGEU) programme, including public investment, private capital transfers and innovative investment transfers. According to our baseline simulation, the NGEU funds significantly foster economic activity by raising aggregate productivity, private investment and employment. As a result, annual GDP growth is increased by 0.17 percentage points on average over the period of NGEU disbursement. Among the different policy instruments considered, we find that innovation transfers have the largest impact on aggregate output, only matched by increases in the stock of public capital if it is highly efficient.