Affiliation:
1. Surugadai University: Surugadai Daigaku
Abstract
Abstract
Network linkage is important in evaluating macroeconomic performance since input‒output networks across industries are asymmetric and respond differently to external shocks. While most studies implicitly assume elastic substitution between intermediates and factors using Cobb‒Douglas models, this is often improbable since the input‒output structure may change due to the shocks, which would be observed as nonlinearities in macroeconomic impacts on sectoral shocks. Additionally, considering regionally located sectors such as the agriculture and food-processing industries, the propagation of sectoral shocks can be interregionally correlated. This study employs the network linkage model to empirically verify the interaction of agro-food sectoral shocks in regional outcomes. By comparing the network effects influencing the national economy and regional economy, the superiority of considering intraregional networks among agro-food sectors is empirically verified, which means that productivity shocks arising in these industries propagate more within their own region.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference32 articles.
1. Networks and the macroeconomy: An empirical exploration;Acemoglu D;NBER Macroeconomics Annual,2016
2. Endogenous production networks;Acemoglu D;Econometrica,2020
3. The network origins of aggregate fluctuations;Acemoglu D;Econometrica,2012
4. Microeconomic origins of macroeconomic tail risks;Acemoglu D;Am Econ Rev,2017
5. Akune Y (2004) Empirical study on agglomeration and location selection of the food industries. Tsukuba-shobo, Tokyo, pp 74–89