The Impact of Regional and Sectoral Productivity Changes on the U.S. Economy

The Impact of Regional and Sectoral Productivity Changes on the U.S. Economy 

The Review of Economic Studies, (2018) 85(4): 2042–2096, joint with Fernando Parro, Esteban Rossi-Hansberg and Pierre-Daniel Sarte

Working paper version: NBER Working Paper No. 20168, 2014 

Supplementary Notes

Replication files with DATA and Matlab code

Slides

Abstract

We study the impact of intersectoral and interregional trade linkages in propagating disaggregated productivity changes to the rest of the economy. Using U.S. regional and industry data, we obtain the aggregate, regional and sectoral elasticities of measured TFP, GDP, and employment to regional and sectoral productivity changes. We find that the elasticities vary significantly depending on the sectors and regions affected, and are importantly determined by the spatial structure of the economy. We use our calibrated model to perform a variety of counterfactual exercises including several specific studies of the aggregate and disaggregate effects of shocks to productivity and infrastructure. The specific episodes we study include the boom in California’s computer industry, the productivity boom in North Dakota associated with the shale oil boom, the disruptions in New York’s finance and real state industries in the 2008 crisis, as well as the effect of the destruction of infrastructure in Louisiana following hurricane Katrina.