Abstract

We introduce a novel static indicator of economy-wide resilience that captures the ability of an economy to adjust and recover from a negative shock from either the demand or the supply side. The metric is counterfactual and reveals by simulation the extent of the adjustments that would keep total income at least at the initial pre-shock level while maintaining the initial economic structure. The larger the scale of the needed adjustments in response to the shock, the smaller is the resilience of the economic system. The methodology we propose for this evaluation uses the concept of constrained input-output multipliers which in turn are incorporated within a linear programming problem. We show the applicability of this approach by calculating and comparing demand and supply resilience indices for a group of ten large OECD economies. For all these economies, the results show that manufacturing industries are more resilient than services sectors and that economic resilience regarding negative supply shocks is higher than demand shocks.

Document Type

Working paper

Language

English

Publisher

Bellaterra : Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Unitat de Fonaments de l'Anàlisi Econòmica; Institut d'Anàlisi Econòmica

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Rights

open access

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