The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies

The Penn World Table (PWT) builds a measure of welfare that is suitable for com- parisons between countries: real GDP at current PPPs. This measure treats the trade balance component of GDP as a transfer of expenditure between countries. By means of an extension to trade of the two-sector AK model s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76566/
_version_ 1848800914849136640
author Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I.
author_facet Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I.
author_sort Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The Penn World Table (PWT) builds a measure of welfare that is suitable for com- parisons between countries: real GDP at current PPPs. This measure treats the trade balance component of GDP as a transfer of expenditure between countries. By means of an extension to trade of the two-sector AK model suggested by Rebelo (1991) studied later by Felbermayr and Licandro (2005), we argue that the trade balance of countries re- flects investment from surplus countries to deficit countries, hence, treating it as a transfer of expenditure can be misleading. We show that in the presence of international trade, free capital mobility, specialization, and biased technological progress in favour of capital goods, the PWT growth rate of output provides a biased measure of the growth in welfare. We propose an alternative approach to this welfare measure, to account for capital move- ments between countries. We find that treating trade balance as investment rather than expenditure transferred across countries modify this bias, generating welfare gains and losses between countries. We find that these results are dependant on the share of total traded volume of each country, the country trade balance sign, and the price of invest- ment goods relative to consumption of each country. We find that welfare in developing small open economies with trade balance deficits and high investment prices relative to domestic goods - the price takers - is consistently underestimated in the PWT. Even more, welfare in developed big open economies and higher investment prices relative to domestic goods - the price makers - face almost no corrections between measures of welfare adopted.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:59:08Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-76566
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:59:08Z
publishDate 2023
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-765662025-02-28T15:19:13Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76566/ The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I. The Penn World Table (PWT) builds a measure of welfare that is suitable for com- parisons between countries: real GDP at current PPPs. This measure treats the trade balance component of GDP as a transfer of expenditure between countries. By means of an extension to trade of the two-sector AK model suggested by Rebelo (1991) studied later by Felbermayr and Licandro (2005), we argue that the trade balance of countries re- flects investment from surplus countries to deficit countries, hence, treating it as a transfer of expenditure can be misleading. We show that in the presence of international trade, free capital mobility, specialization, and biased technological progress in favour of capital goods, the PWT growth rate of output provides a biased measure of the growth in welfare. We propose an alternative approach to this welfare measure, to account for capital move- ments between countries. We find that treating trade balance as investment rather than expenditure transferred across countries modify this bias, generating welfare gains and losses between countries. We find that these results are dependant on the share of total traded volume of each country, the country trade balance sign, and the price of invest- ment goods relative to consumption of each country. We find that welfare in developing small open economies with trade balance deficits and high investment prices relative to domestic goods - the price takers - is consistently underestimated in the PWT. Even more, welfare in developed big open economies and higher investment prices relative to domestic goods - the price makers - face almost no corrections between measures of welfare adopted. 2023-12-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76566/2/THESIS%2C%20Rodriguez%20Juan.pdf Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I. (2023) The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Growth measurement Dynamic General Equilibrium Welfare Quantity indexes Equivalent variation NIPA Fisher-Shell index Divisia index Embodied technical change
spellingShingle Growth measurement
Dynamic General Equilibrium
Welfare
Quantity indexes
Equivalent variation
NIPA
Fisher-Shell index
Divisia index
Embodied technical change
Rodriguez Gaudin, J.I.
The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies
title The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies
title_full The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies
title_fullStr The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies
title_full_unstemmed The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies
title_short The mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the Penn World Table measurements of output growth in open economies
title_sort mismeasured price takers: an alternative approach to the penn world table measurements of output growth in open economies
topic Growth measurement
Dynamic General Equilibrium
Welfare
Quantity indexes
Equivalent variation
NIPA
Fisher-Shell index
Divisia index
Embodied technical change
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/76566/