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Assessing the Effect of Public Capital on Growth: An Extension of the World Bank Long-Term Growth Model

December 6, 2018

DECRG Kuala Lumpur Seminar Series

  • To analyze the effect of an increase in the quantity or quality of public investment on growth, this paper extends the World Bank’s Long-Term Growth Model (LTGM), by separating the total capital stock into public and private portions, with the former adjusted for its quality. The paper presents the Long-Term Growth Model Public Capital Extension (LTGM-PC) and accompanying freely downloadable Excel-based tool. It also constructs a new Infrastructure Efficiency Index (IEI), by combining quality indicators for power, roads, and water as a cardinal measure of the quality of public capital in each country. In the model, public investment generates a larger boost to growth if existing stocks of public capital are low, or if public capital is particularly important in the production function. Through the lens of the model and utilizing newly-collated cross-country data, the paper presents three stylized facts and some related policy implications. First, the measured public capital stock is roughly constant as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) across income groups, which implies that the returns to new public investment, and its effect on growth, are roughly constant across development levels. Second, developing countries are relatively short of private capital, which means that private investment provides the largest boost to growth in low-income countries. Third, low-income countries have the lowest quality of public capital and the lowest efficient public capital stock as a share of gross domestic product. Although this does not affect the returns to public investment, it means that improving the efficiency of public investment has a sizable effect on growth in low-income countries. Quantitatively, a permanent 1ppt GDP increase in public investment boosts growth by around 0.1-0.2ppts over the following few years (depending on the parameters), with the effect declining over time. 

    Download the paper

    The Long Term Growth Model

    Watch and join us via Live Chat: Seminar will be live-streamed, allowing for online audience participation (only available during the seminar)

  • Sharmila Devadas

    Sharmila Devadas is a research fellow in the Macroeconomics and Growth team of the World Bank’s Development Research Group hub in Kuala Lumpur. She has been seconded from Bank Negara Malaysia (the Central Bank of Malaysia) where she worked in the Monetary Policy Department. Her current research interests include macro-financial linkages, public capital and growth, and the relationship between migration and productivity. She holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Nottingham, United Kingdom, and an MSc in Economics from the University of Warwick, United Kingdom.

DETAILS

  • WHEN: Thursday, December 6, 2018; 12:30 -2:00PM
  • WHERE: World Bank Malaysia Office, Level 3, Sasana Kijang, No. 2, Jalan Dato’ Onn
  • RSVP: Kindly RSVP by Wednesday, December 5, 2018
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