Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Baby Boomer Entrepreneurship

Annamaria Lusardi (George Washington University) will be our speaker. She is presenting “Entrepreneurship among Baby Boomers: Recent Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study”.

Health and retirement study
Baby Boomers age 52 to 65 in the 2012 wave. N=9063.
Compare boomer entrepreneurs to previous cohort of entrepreneurs of the same age range. (1998 HRS wave).
Very difficult to define entrepreneurs.
Self-employment is measure and proxy of entrepreneurship. Small scale data.
Business ownership is also an imperfect indicator of entrepreneurship. (You could have inherited or purchase. Nothing to do with starting). Another argument to look at the flows than the stocks.
In HRS, both business ownership and business income are reported at the household level.
Measure: 1). Labor force participation 2). Self-employment 3). Receipt of business & wage incomes 4). Partner works n family business as reported by self-employed in individual in a couple
Entrepreneur: self-employed. Working in the family business. Not sole wage earner.
Capture active participation.

Compare with the Kauffman Index, calculated using Census’ Current Population Survey (CPS). You are self-employed and work at least 15 hours.
8% of all individuals in the age range are entrepreneurs (business owners)
13% of all individuals in the age range are self-employed.
In only 39% cases do the two definitions coincide.

Labor force participation in this age group has increased and so condition on lfp, the rate should be more pronounced.

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Economic Complexity

MIT is reporting growing acceptance of economic growth theories of César Hidalgo and Ricardo Hausman.

The standard theoretical framework for development economics was established more than 50 years ago by the MIT economist Robert Solow, who developed a mathematical model that predicts countries’ economic growth on the basis of labor and capital (the tools of production); subsequent work expanded the model to include factors such as land and human capital (expert knowledge). The model proved highly influential, ultimately earning Solow the 1987 Nobel Prize in economics.

Hidalgo argues, by lumping together a huge variety of resources under the general heading “capital,” it can obscure distinctions that are crucial to an accurate understanding of countries’ economies. In a series of papers cowritten with Ricardo Hausmann, director of the Center for International Development at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, Hidalgo has argued that, indeed, the best predictor of a country’s future economic health is not the magnitude but the diversity of its production capacity.




Economists think of production in terms of inputs and outputs. The outputs are the goods that a country produces. The inputs are everything that’s required to produce those goods. In 19th-century America, lumber was an example of a product with relatively few inputs. Exporting it required little more than the manpower and tools to chop down trees and haul them to shipping ports. Twentieth-century digital-signal-processing chips, on the other hand, are products that require a lot of inputs: the ability to extract and purify exotic materials like gallium arsenide, computer-aided design software to produce circuit layouts, and the chemicals and vacuum chambers required for the deposition of different layers of material, among other things.

Hidalgo and Hausmann argue that the diversity of a country’s production capacity, and thus the true strength of its economy, depends on the diversity of both its outputs and its inputs. Two countries could export the same number of products — they could have the same diversity of outputs — but if one exports only garments, it’s likely to have many fewer inputs than a country that exports a mix of garments and other light manufacturing, agricultural products, electronics and cultural goods. And the country with more inputs, the researchers claim, will adapt better to a changing world economy.

It’s an intuitively plausible claim, but getting a quantitative handle on it is difficult. Diversity of outputs is easy enough to measure: Economists have developed some standard schemes for classifying products that have borne up well in empirical studies. But almost anything could count as an input: not just natural resources or factories but, say, a good public-transportation system that makes the labor market more efficient, or intellectual-property laws that reward entrepreneurship.

That’s where Hidalgo’s mathematical tools come in. Rather than try to exhaustively categorize inputs — probably an impossible task — Hidalgo simply assumes that products that require a lot of inputs are scarcer than those that don’t: More countries export lumber than export digital-signal-processing chips. By analyzing both the diversity of a country’s products and the number of other countries capable of producing the same products, Hidalgo is able to quantitatively assess the diversity of the country’s inputs.

Cash value

Hidalgo and Hausmann have found that GDP correlates pretty well with diversity of outputs, but it correlates much better with diversity of inputs. And the cases where the correlation breaks down could actually be more interesting than the cases where it holds, because they could indicate economies poised for growth. In 1970, for instance, the Korean economy had much greater diversity of inputs, according to Hidalgo’s measure, than the Peruvian economy; but Peru had twice Korea’s GDP per capita. Over the next 30 years, the relative diversity of inputs in the two countries’ economies stayed more or less the same, but by 2003, Korea had four times Peru’s GDP per capita.

Moreover, Hidalgo points out, Korea’s surge is impossible to explain using the standard factors of production. “In 1970, Peruvian workers were working with four times the capital per worker, and they were working with two and a half times the land per worker, and they had the same level of education as Korean workers,” Hidalgo says.

Arxiv - The Product Space Conditions the Development of Nations

Economies grow by upgrading the type of products they produce and export. The technology, capital, institutions and skills needed to make such new products are more easily adapted from some products than others. We study the network of relatedness between products, or product space, finding that most upscale products are located in a densely connected core while lower income products occupy a less connected periphery. We show that countries tend to move to goods close to those they are currently specialized in, allowing nations located in more connected parts of the product space to upgrade their exports basket more quickly. Most countries can reach the core only if they jump over empirically infrequent distances in the product space. This may help explain why poor countries have trouble developing more competitive exports, failing to converge to the income levels of rich countries.


In this paper we have mapped the product space, and studied how countries dynamically
evolve on it. We empirically proved that countries develop RCA following a diffusion
process for which our outcome based definition of the product space appears to be the
natural substrate. Moreover, the structure of the product space limits the diffusion process by being non-traversable by jumps of any proximity. When we combine these results with the fact that poorer countries tend to have RCA mainly on peripheral products, it implies that a country’s productive structure is constrained not only by its levels of factor endowments, but also by how easily those product-specific factors can be adapted to alternative uses, as indicated by location in the product space. On a more global perspective, these results point towards a new hypothesis for the lack of income convergence in the world: convergence can only exist if countries have the ability to reach any area of the product space. Our study shows that most of the diffusion occurs through links with proximities of 0.6 or larger, thus the most popular strategy involves diffusing to nearby products, a strategy that is successful for richer countries located on the core of the space, and ineffective for poorer countries populating the periphery.

Social Progress Index

http://www.astroman.com.pl/?mod=magazine&a=read&id=1451



http://www.socialprogressimperative.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/SPI-2016-Main-Report.pdf





Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Mapping New Economic Opportunities

I slept at 2AM after 10PM class and driving because I couldn't sleep. Then, I woke up at 6AM, got ready and drove to a Marriott Hotel at Falls Church. Took about 40 mins and lots of traffic on the 495 North as I hit the morning traffic. I don't think I've traveled so early for at least a semester. I realize how different my life is to others. And, of course, it hits me that most people are wealthier than me. I listened to Judges about Samson and frowned at his foolishness. This was my third time attending the economic forecast conference hosted by CRA. And, I have to say that I have become comfortable. I don't feel same conscious in the presence of developers anymore. I sat down at a table and got myself a cup of coffee, danish pastry and fruits as well as omelet, potatoes and bacon. It was a satisfying breakfast. Jeannette stopped by and told me that I should talk to 3 people. I didn't even feel the need to and I was totally comfortable with that. I also thought about Solomiya who emailed me how my comments that Russia and Ukraine are brothers was inappropriate. And, I was fine. Nothing inside me turned anymore. I felt good. I was the first to apologize for my attitude yesterday and I was done. I was not going to be sorry anymore. It is right that I am done even if others overreact.

Out of three conferences that I have attended, this was by far the best. I loved Chris Nassetta's (CEO of Hilton) and President Cabrera's talks. Chris emphasized how Hilton experienced the best year in its 98 year history and the decision for moving the HQ from West Hollywood to McLean. Most of their customers are in the East coast and the Eastern Time zone suits better their global operation. They also got a good deal from the state of VA. President Cabrera spoke about how GMU positions itself by ensuring that they are training and generating workforce that the industry needs (e.g. cybersecurity, data analytics, engineering). I was especially glad to hear Dr. McAuliffe speak. He said that GMU is the best school and that Cardinal Bank is the best bank and that VA is the best state. Arguable but I liked that he took pride in his work and his state and his partners. And, I loved to see that he really was excited for his work and had a clear vision for what he was doing. Dr. Terry and Fuller also gave good talks on the national and regional trends and a srategy to counter the regional shift from federal town to a private sector driven growth. I became comfortable. It really started from meeting Dr. Zoltan. I am happy that my PhD is not just neoclassical economics and math. I want to make this PhD a worthwhile thing. Opportunities are endless. And, I don't need to worry about jobs. Even masters students have jobs, some even in the World Bank. PhDs are still highly regarded. This is the moment to cease.