Globalisation, COVID-19 and Income Distribution: A Theoretical Evaluation

IF 1.1 Q4 BUSINESS Foreign Trade Review Pub Date : 2023-06-11 DOI:10.1177/00157325231158840
Asmita Das, Damayanti Sau, Ranjanendra Narayan Nag
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Abstract

The article makes a theoretical attempt to explain how different interconnected measures of globalisation—service led growth, tariff reform, agricultural trade liberalisation and capital account liberalisation—affect the skilled–unskilled wage disparity, sector-wise performance, income distribution and aggregate welfare of the economy. We pay attention to land augmenting technological progress as an essential ingredient of inclusive growth and discuss effects of COVID-19 as a supply shock. In so-doing, we construct a three-sector general equilibrium framework with an export-oriented service sector, a tariff-protected import competing manufacturing sector and an export-oriented traded agricultural sector. We find that service-led growth and tariff liberalisation shifts the income distribution in favour of the landed gentry and skilled labour. Agricultural trade liberalisation and capital account liberalisation also debilitate the income distribution. Land augmenting technological progress adversely impacts the manufacturing sector but benefits the other sectors. Following the outbreak of the pandemic, a fall in labour endowment and rise in transaction costs were observed. A decrease in the endowment of skilled labour reduces the production in service sector and increases the production of the manufactured commodity. The results are reversed when the endowment of unskilled labour decreases. An increase in transaction produces unfair outcome from the perspective of income distribution. In this context it becomes imperative to mention that, the construction of the three-sector general equilibrium framework is not new, and that the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic cannot be reduced to just a supply shock. COVID-19 has elements of both supply shock and demand shock, but in this article, we address supply side dimensions of COVID shock in conjunction with the effects of lockdown. In addition, we also demonstrate the robustness of our results to an alternate assumption on the structure of the model. JEL Codes: D50, F66, J31
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全球化、COVID-19与收入分配:一个理论评价
本文从理论上试图解释全球化的不同相互关联的措施——服务主导的增长、关税改革、农业贸易自由化和资本账户自由化——如何影响熟练工人和非熟练工人的工资差距、部门绩效、收入分配和经济的总福利。我们关注土地增产技术进步,将其视为包容性增长的重要组成部分,并讨论COVID-19作为供应冲击的影响。为此,我们构建了一个三部门一般均衡框架,其中包括出口导向型服务部门、关税保护的进口竞争制造业部门和出口导向型贸易农业部门。我们发现,服务业主导的增长和关税自由化使收入分配向有利于地主和熟练劳动力的方向转变。农业贸易自由化和资本账户自由化也削弱了收入分配。土地增值技术进步对制造业产生不利影响,但对其他部门有利。疫情爆发后,劳动力禀赋下降,交易成本上升。熟练劳动力禀赋的减少减少了服务部门的生产,增加了制成品的生产。当非熟练劳动力的禀赋减少时,结果就会相反。从收入分配的角度看,交易的增加产生了不公平的结果。在此背景下,有必要指出,构建三部门一般均衡框架并不新鲜,新冠肺炎疫情的影响不能仅仅归结为供给冲击。COVID-19既有供应冲击的因素,也有需求冲击的因素,但在本文中,我们将结合封锁的影响来探讨COVID-19冲击的供应方面。此外,我们还证明了我们的结果对模型结构的另一个假设的鲁棒性。JEL代码:D50, F66, J31
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
23.10%
发文量
37
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