Linkages from the farm sector to the Australian macroeconomy : towards a theoretical and empirical analysis
Abstract
The volatile fortunes of the Australian farm sector in recent
years, and particularly the severe drought of 1982-83, has renewed
interest, amongst policy makers and policy advisers, in the impact
which developments in the farm sector may have on the macroeconomy.
However, in the Australian literature, there are few detailed
theoretical or empirical analyses of farm/macro linkages. Further,
the existing Australian macroeconomic models do not provide a fully
suitable framework for undertaking such an analysis.
In view of these gaps or inadequacies in the existing
literature, the objective of the present thesis is, firstly, to make
a contribution towards the development of a macroeconomic model
framework which is suitable for analysing the role of the farm
sector in the Australian macroeconomy and, secondly, to undertake
some of the associated analysis.
To that end, a relatively large theoretical model is developed
in which the linkages between the farm sector and the macroeconomy
are emphasised. The model proves to be too large and complex to be
tractable using strictly formal algebraic techniques. Therefore, in
the first instance, the analysis is undertaken using a slightly less
rigorous geometric characterisation of the model. After this
geometric approach is fully exploited, some parts of the analysis
are extended and refined using theoretical simulation techniques.
A number of important results are established in these
theoretical analyses. It is shown that, in principle, the marketing
and institutional environment in which the farm sector operates is
of major importance in influencing the macroeconomic implications of
production and price shocks originating in the farm sector. It is
also demonstrated that shocks to the volume of farm production or to
farm prices may influence macroeconomic variables such as non-farm
G.D.P., the interest rate and the state of the balance of payments
in a direction which is at variance to that suggested by intuition
or conventional wisdom. For example, an exogenous (drought induced)
decline in farm production could have a beneficial impact on
non-farm output and the state of the balance of payments.
Alternatively, a drought which has a (more intuitive) adverse effect
on the overall level of economic activity may place upward pressure
on the interest rate. In a similar vein, an exogenous increase in
the price of farm commodities on overseas markets may reduce
domestic economic activity and worsen the balance of payments.
Because of the time and resources required to develop and use a
relatively large theoretical simulation model, it is not feasible,
within the context of the thesis, to apply theoretical simulation
techniques to each of the analyses which are undertaken less
formally using the geometric characterisation of the model.
However, the foundations are laid to permit the ready extension of
the theoretical simulation technique to these remaining cases as
part of a future research exercise. The existence of the
theoretical simulation model and analyses should also facilitate the
eventual development of an empirical version of the model. Given that some further post thesis research will be required
in order to develop an empirical version of the full model
structure, it was decided to seek some tentative and preliminary
empirical results from a very simple empirical version of the
model. A major conclusion to emerge from this empirical analysis is
that the farm sector may not have declined in relative importance as
a source of change in non~farm output over the period since the
early 1950s and may even have increased in importance. Such a
result serves to provide some additional motivation for persisting
with the line of research commenced in the thesis.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description