Aggregate productivity in the Philippine economy
Abstract
The Philippines has been the weakest growth performer among the ASEAN
countries. This thesis combines both econometric techniques and a computable
general equilibrium model to examine the reasons for the country's poor economic
performance. Growth models are developed showing the country's declining
productivity performance, not only relative to the average of the middle income
countries, but also relative to the country's past record. These confirm that aggregate
productivity growth was at its worst during the government investment boom period
of the late 1970s and early 1980s.
In addition, the cross country growth model shows that the investment rate in
the Philippines was lower than the average of the middle income countries in
contrast to the relatively higher investment rate in other ASEAN countries. During
the periods when the country's growth performance was above the average of the
middle income countries, the lower investment rate partially offset the contribution
of other factors.
The results from a multisectoral general equilibrium model, which
incorporates imperfect competition and scale economies, suggest that aggregate
productivity is low because of trade distortions and associated oligopolistic pricing
behavior of protected firms. The sudden fall in productivity growth in the 1980s,
however, is more closely associated with the misallocation of investment during the
boom period. The sectoral pattem of investment, which has been influenced by the
price and profit incentives perpetuated by government investment policies, has not
been such as to foster the growth of industries that could generate the largest impacts
on the economy from small changes in industry-level productivity. Using the same
multisectoral framework, and adding risk premia to the external cost of capital such as might have been associated with the political instability of the early 1980s, the
effects of capital flight are investigated. The results confirm that these not only
reduce output in the short run but also total factor productivity.
Finally, imposing on the growth model of the Philippine economy the
assumption that no boom in investment occurred and that no associated decline in
total factor productivity followed, it is possible to make a counterfactual simulation
through the late 1980s. Real GDP in 1987 could have been higher than the level
actually achieved by as much as 11 per cent.
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