Disaggregated Economic Accounts
Asger Lau Andersen, Kilian Huber, Niels Johannesen, Ludwig Straub, Emil Toft Vestergaard
We develop a system of disaggregated economic accounts.
We develop a system of disaggregated economic accounts. The system breaks down national accounting positions into bilateral flows between consistently defined groups of consumers (consumer cells), groups of producers (producer cells), the government, and the rest of the world. We disaggregate the full circular flow of money, including consumer spending, labor compensation, firm profits, intermediates trade, foreign trade, and government transactions, while satisfying all national accounting identities. We implement the disaggregated system for small region-by-industry cells in Denmark and present stylized facts, such as variation in domestic spending, local and urban bias in consumer spending, and a pattern of triangular flows across regions. Cell-level measures of spending intensity capture how much spending by a cell contributes to the income of cells experiencing unemployment after a shock. Using a general equilibrium model, we show that fiscal transfers raise aggregate GDP by more when they target cells with high spending intensity on unemployed cells. The disaggregated economic accounts help governments select more effective policies.
Trade and Domestic Distortions: The Case of Informality
Rafael Dix-Carneiro, Pinelopi Goldberg, Costas Meghir, Gabriel Ulyssea
Unemployment Insurance Reforms and Labour Market Dynamics
Benjamin Hartung, Philip Jung, Moritz Kuhn
A Congestion Theory of Unemployment Fluctuations
Yusuf Mercan, Benjamin Schoefer, Petr Sedláček
Fundamentally Reforming the DI System: Evidence from Germany
Yaming Cao, Björn Fischer-Weckemann, Johannes Geyer, Nicolas Ziebarth