Reallocation, Productivity, and Monetary Policy in an Energy Crisis
Published: 30 April 2024
This paper proposes a New Keynesian multi-sector industry model incorporating firm heterogeneity, entry, and exit dynamics, while considering energy production from both fossil fuels and renewables. We examine the impacts of a sustained fossil fuel price hike on sectoral size, labor productivity, and inflation. Final good sectors are ex-ante heterogeneous in terms of energy intensity in production. For this reason, a higher relative price of fossil resources affects their profitability asymmetrically. Further, it entails a substitution effect that leads to a greener mix of resources in the production of energy. As production costs rise, less efficient firms leave the market, while new entrants must display higher idiosyncratic productivity. While this process enhances average labor productivity, it also results in a lasting decrease in the entry of new firms. A central bank with a strong anti-inflationary stance can circumvent the energy price increase and mitigate its inflationary effects by curbing rising production costs while promoting sectoral reallocation. While this entails a higher impact cost in terms of output and lower average productivity, it leads to a faster recovery in business dynamism in the medium-term.
Keywords: Energy; productivity; firm entry and exit; monetary policy
JEL codes E62; L16; O33
Working paper no. 811
811 - Reallocation, Productivity, and Monetary Policy in an Energy Crisis
Research Highlights
- In this paper, we develop a multi-sector industry dynamic model with endogenous entry and exit of heterogeneous firms to analyze the impact of a persistent increase in the price of fossil resources on the relative size of sectors, labor productivity and competitiveness.
- The rise in the price of energy causes a reallocation of economic activity from energy intensive sectors to greener sectors;
- due to a selection and cleansing process, this ultimately leads to a decrease in the number of firms and higher productivity;
- a central bank with a strong anti-inflationary stance will mitigate the inflationary effects of the energy price increase;
- while this entails a higher impact cost in terms of output and lower average productivity, it leads to a faster recovery in business dynamism in the medium-term.
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