Author:
Mandel Antoine,Veetil Vipin P.
Abstract
Abstract
This paper develops a network economy model to study the propagation of the COVID lockdown shock. Firms are related to each other through buyer–seller relations in the market for intermediate inputs. Firms choose production levels and input combinations using prices that emerge from local interactions. Nothing forbids trade at out-of-equilibrium prices. In such a setting, disequilibrium spills over from one market to another due to the interconnections between markets. These disequilibrium dynamics are capable of generating unemployment when workers released by contracting firms are not frictionlessly absorbed by expanding firms. We calibrate the model to the US economy using a data set with more than 200,000 buyer–seller relations between about 70,000 firms. Computational experiments on the calibrated economy suggest that the COVID lockdown generates a sizeable decline in GDP. The endogenously generated unemployment dynamics is a primary determinant of the cost of the lockdown.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Reference29 articles.
1. Evidence on structural instability in macroeconomic time series relations;Stock;Journal of Business and Economic Statistics,1996
2. Is price flexibility destabilizing?;De Long;The American Economic Review,1986
3. Price Flexibility and Output Stability: An Old Keynesian View
4. Impacts on the U.S. macroeconomy of mandatory business closures in response to the COVID-19 Pandemic
5. The great lockdown: Information, noise, and macroeconomic fluctuations;Brzoza-Brzezina;Macroeconomic Dynamics,2022