Macroeconomic Policy as Implicit Industrial Policy: Its Industry and Enterprise Effects

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Foreword. 1. Introduction. 2. Managed Trade and Targeted vs. Generic Industrial Policy. 3. The User Cost of Capital: Link from Macroeconomic Policy to Business Decisions. 4. Influences of Macroeconomic Policy on the Enterprise. 5. A Context for Industrial Policy: History, Performance and Strategic Role of the Machine Tool Industry in the United States. 6. Technological Change, Learning-by-Doing, and the Structure of Production in the U.S. Machine Tool Industry. 7. Measuring the Effects of Macroeconomic Policy in an Industry Econometric Model. 8. Macroeconomic and Financial Effects on Competitiveness in U.S. Manufacturing: Simulations to Measure Policy Effects. 9. Measuring and Forecasting the Industry of Macroeconomic Events: Crowding out of Manufacturing Investment in a Macro-Micro Framework. 10. Technological Factors and Industrial Policy: Harnessing Generic Industrial Policies for Economic Growth and Competitiveness. 11. Conclusions and Future Research. References. Author Index. Subject Index.
Whether they should or not, few economists do in fact refrain from making pronouncements on public policy, although the state of the economy (both here and elsewhere) suggests that either the advice given is bad or, if good, that it is ignored . . . I happen to think that we are appallingly ignorant about many aspects of the working of the economic system -- the economics of the firm and industry. Ronald H Coase, Economists and Public Policy In this volume we attempt to address an element of Coase's concern by linking the empirical economics of the fInn and industry more closely to macroeconomic policies, and to demonstrate how to assess some of the effects of those policies. The scope of our study ranges from a structural macroeconomic model of the United States, from which macroeconomic effects are propagated to detailed structural models of SIC four digit industries. The rationale for our approach is very much in the spirit of various integrated macroeconomic/industry models constructed by Dale Jorgenson, working with various collaborators. Our approach is also consistent with, and motivated by, Lawrence Klein's agenda of modeling explicitly and structurally the macro and sectoral elements in the national economy. We also examine the effects of the macroeconomic policies of different countries on the enterprise. In only one case, our examination of crowding out of private investment by government defIcit fmancing, is the linkage among sectors implicit.

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