Topic: The Causal Effects of Global Supply Chain Disruptions on Macroeconomic Outcomes: Evidence and Theory
Speaker: Francesco Zanetti (University of Oxford)
Time & venue:
Fridays, 10:00 - 12:00 (starting on 27.10.2023); see schedule for seminar venues
Description:
The Research Seminar in Economics offers a platform for invited speakers to present their current research, thereby promoting the exchange between speakers and faculty members. It covers empirical as well as theoretical contributions across all fields of economics.
More information can be found on the seminar's website.
Abstract: We study the causal effects and policy implications of global supply chain disruptions on the U.S. economy. We construct a new index of supply chain disruptions from the Automatic Identification System data of containerships, developing a novel spatial clustering algorithm that determines real-time congestion from the positions and speeds of containerships in major ports around the globe. We develop a new theoretical framework with search frictions between exporters and importers in the goods market, transportation costs, and spare capacity that provides us with unique identifying restrictions arising from the co-movements of spare capacity, price, and output to study the causal effects and the changes in the effectiveness of monetary policy due to supply chain disruptions. Structural VAR models with these restrictions establish that supply chain disruptions significantly: (i) depress real GDP, raise prices, and generate a surge in spare capacity, and (ii) increase the effectiveness of contractionary monetary policy in taming inflation while reducing the sensitivity of output amid the supply chain disruptions of the Covid-19 pandemic.