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A joint initiative of Ludwig-Maximilians University’s Center for Economic Studies and the Ifo Institute for Economic Research Bulletin Volume 18 No. 3 July 2008 YOUR GENETIC CODE, PLEASE? There is much promise in the unraveling of the human genetic code. Tailored medical treatments and early detection of ailments come to mind. But when insurance companies take an interest in your genetic make-up, better watch out. Michael Hoy is doing research on how to tackle this problem. (page 2) KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES IFO NEWS Wanting to earn or possess as much as your neighbour is a widespread feeling. And it does appear to have some economic effects. Ngo Van Long intends to find out whether “status consciousness” plays a role in welfare and wealth-distribution. (page 8) (p. 4-5) VENICE SUMMER INSTITUTE (p. 5) FEATURED RESEARCHERS William Branch (p. 3) Joan Costa-Font (p. 2) Theo Eicher (p. 3) Timothy Goodspeed (p. 6) Michael Hoel (p. 8) Michael Hoy (p. 2)) Mario Jametti (p. 6) Kajal Lahiri (p. 6) Ngo Van Long (p. 8) Frank Stähler (p. 7) James Tybout (p. 7) EURO-ZONE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK The quarterly joint economic forecast prepared by Germany’s Ifo institute, France’s INSEE institute, and Italy’s ISAE institute, confirms the slowdown of the area’s economies. GDP will practically stagnate, industrial production and private consumption will weaken, and inflation will pick up. (pages 4-5) WHITHER WTO? Does the World Trade Organisation really promote bilateral trade flows? There has been some room for doubt, and Theo Eicher shows why the doubters may be right. (page 3) THE AGGLOMERATION FACTOR Much has been said about tax incentives as a factor behind location decisions by firms. But, as Mario Jametti’s research shows, that is not all that matters when it comes to picking up your next business location. Agglomeration does too. (page 6) (IR)RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS We all like to think that we are rational beings, thank you, in particular when it comes to economic decisions. But, actually, when you put household economic decisions under the magnifying glass, as William Branch has done, we cannot but concede that we might, just might, be a tiny bit irrational. (page 3) HEALTH-CARE FEDERALISM Understanding the formation of health behaviour can help to explain many things, from obesity in children to the most suitable organisation of a health-care system. Joan Costa-Font will devote part of his research agenda while at CES to this issue. (page 2) FDI CHOICES The choice of FDI, such as greenfield investment or joint ventures, determines market structures and economic performance to a considerable extent. Frank Stähler is expanding our understanding of what drives the entry mode of multinational enterprises. (page 7) Online version of this issue available at www.cesifo.de Vol. 18, No. 3 • July 2008 HEALTH PRODUCTION AND HEALTH-CARE FEDERALISM Costa Modern European societies are devoting increasing attention to understanding the mechanisms that explain the formation of health behaviour and how best to organise a health system to improve the health and health-care outcomes. Joan Costa-Font will attempt to contribute to this debate during his stay at CES, focusing in particular on the economic explanation of obesity in children, and on spatial effects. Among other things, he will examine whether a child’s obesity is explained by its parents’ obesity along with the household organisation, namely its parents’ working conditions, education and degree of affluence. The study draws upon Spanish data from 2005/2003, a country that, together with Italy, tops the European overweight and obesity ranking. Preliminary results suggest that children’s obesity increases with parents’ obesity (“child to adult body mass effects”), even after undertaking controls for endogeneity. His second area of research will be to examine the effectiveness of health-care federalism in achieving its intended goals. Particularly, the paper will try to solve the paradoxical finding that suggests no empirical association between regional health expenditures and mortality in the United States. Female labour market participation only exerts an influence for middle-educated women who could not afford support and whose opportunity cost of dropping their jobs would be far too high. Mr Costa-Font is researching the extent to which spatial dependence in health care along with political and fiscal interactions explain regional health expenditures patterns and health outcomes. He is a Senior Research Fellow in Health Economics at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and has taught economics at the University of Barcelona, where he was Senior Lecturer (Professor Titular d’Universitat). He holds a PhD and a BSc in Economics from the U. of Barcelona, a MSc in Economics from LSE, a MA in Economics from Universitat Pompeu Fabra, and both graduate and undergraduate training in law (LLM-DEA & LLB, U. of Barcelona) and a BSc political science from Madrid. He specialises in health and social economics as well as the political economy of the European welfare state design. Joan Costa-Font has published more than sixty articles in peer-reviewed journals in economics and public policy, including Economic Policy, Economic Geography, Journal of the European Economic Association, World Economy, Urban Studies, Health Policy, Journal of European Social Policy, Journal of Health Politics, Policy & Law, and a number of other leading journals. Currently, he is co-editing the book “The Economics of New Health Technologies”, to be published by Oxford University Press in 2009. YOUR GENETIC CODE, PLEASE? Hoy The debate about whether insurance companies should be allowed to use results of genetic tests for underwriting purposes is both lively and increasingly relevant, as both technology and lawmaking efforts are progressing rapidly. Both houses in the US federal government passed on April 24 this year the so-called Genetic Information Non-discrimination Act (GINA). Many European countries have had similar protections in place for many years. Michael Hoy, with a number of coauthors, has looked from a number of angles at the issue of genetic information being used by insurers to risk-rate premiums and found a rationale for restricting insurers’ use of such information as a way to provide implicit insurance against future premium risk, while balancing this advantage against the costs of adverse selection that result 2 tion from insurers and employers if they take genetic tests. Thus, it is a challenge to determine how best to reap the benefits of this potential revolution in health care. There are also tough decisions ahead about what tests and technologies to support through either private or public health insurance and how best to provide the appropriate incentives for takeup of these new technologies. These are the issues that Mr. Hoy will continue to investigate while visiting CES. from allowing individuals to privately hold such information. Now the science has moved on quite far towards finding genetic variants. The International HapMap Project, a sort of second phase of the Genomic Revolution, looks finally to lead to the real promise of vastly improved health care through genetic therapies and generally improved understanding of disease. However, many fear genetic discrimina- Bulletin Michael Hoy is a professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Guelph, Ontario. He received a B.Math degree from the University of Waterloo in 1975, an MA (Economics) from the University of Guelph in 1975, and a PhD (Economics) from the London School of Economics in 1982. His published research is primarily in the areas of Information Theory, Insurance Markets, Inequality and Poverty Measurement. Vol. 18, No. 3 • July 2008 WHITHER WTO? RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS Eicher Branch Despite the World Trade Organisation’s apparent success in lowering tariffs around the globe, initial empirical trade studies cast substantial doubt on the actual effects of WTO membership on bilateral trade flows. The controversy seemed resolved when recent work showed that the WTO does indeed exert a strong, positive impact on bilateral trade flows when researchers correctly account for variations in multilateral trade costs. Theo Eicher, from the University of Washington and a research professor at the Ifo Institute for Economic Research, reexamines the topic by unifying three strands of the empirical trade literature: one branch controls for variations in multilateral trade costs, another one controls for “natural trading partner” effects, and the third allows for individual effects of preferential trading agreements (PTA) on trade flows. Using prominent datasets that have previously been used to show strong WTO effects, Mr Eicher (together with his coauthor Christian Henn at the International Monetary Fund) show decisively that WTO effects vanish after controlling for the effects of multilateral trade costs, natural trading partnerships, and PTA memberships. This most comprehensive empirical approach to identifying WTO membership effects highlights that much of the trade creation that had previously been attributed to the WTO is actually due to PTAs or due to observed and unobserved similarities among trading partners. Mr Eicher is also continuing his work in Munich with Thomas Strobel at the Ifo institute that compares US/German productivity determinants. Here a pattern of lagging information and communications technologies investment in Germany seems to explain its lagging productivity performance since 1990. In the years since, German labor productivity has declined in two distinct stages, while it increased twice in the US. Theo Eicher is professor and Robert R. Richards Distinguished Scholar at the University of Washington. He is also a Research Professor at the Ifo institute and an Affiliate Professor at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich’s economics department, where he teaches a course on Advanced Macroeconomics and Growth. He received his PhD From Columbia University in 1994 and currently serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Macroeconomics and as associate editor of the European Economic Review. IFO AND CESIFO SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COUNCIL The Scientific Advisory Council welcomes new members and bids farewell to some others. Established in 1992, the Council consists of internationally respected independent academics and experts who provide non-partisan, external quality control, and advise the Executive Board and the Administrative Council in the long-term planning of research and development. (Humboldt University Berlin), Monika Schnitzer (Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich), and Heinrich W. Ursprung (University of Konstanz and new Council Vice-Chairman). They join Council Chairman Robert H. Haveman (University of Wisconsin-Madison), Bruno S. Frey (University of Zurich), and Eric A. Hanushek (Stanford University, Hoover Institution). The new members are Robin W. Boadway (Queen’s University London, Canada), Massimo Bordignon (Università Cattolica Milan), Michael C. Burda Retiring are former Chairman A. Razin, former Vice-Chairman K. Sauernheimer, G. Bertola, B. Huber, H. Lütkepohl, P. Pestieau, R. Rees, A. Sandmo and H.-J. Vosgerau. Bulletin Most economic decisions by households and firms depend on expectations of future economic conditions. Most macroeconomic theory and policy analysis make strong assumptions regarding the manner in which agents form these assumptions, typically assuming that expectations are rational. However, empirical work casts doubt on the rational expectations hypothesis. William Branch, of the University of California at Irvine, contributes research to a burgeoning field that investigates the implications, for the economy, of modeling agents as boundedly rational, that is, they form their forecasts by learning from recent data. His most recent work, which he will continue while at CES, focuses on the asset market implications of bounded rationality. According to Mr Branch, asset markets have long been a puzzle to macroeconomists. The occasional bubbles and subsequent crashes, excess volatility, among many other empirical puzzles, are at odds with the efficient markets and rational expectations paradigm. Mr Branch and co-authors show that small deviations from rational expectations can explain these puzzles. In particular, if stock traders are uncertain of the risk and return in stocks and try to infer their fundamental values from real-time data, then they may occasionally be led to believe that stocks have become less risky. Traders will then trade on these beliefs, and stock price bubbles will ensue. Eventually, though, agents will uncover the true riskiness of the stock, sell off their holdings, and the bubble will crash. Mr Branch shows that these recurring bubbles and crashes can arise when agents hold beliefs very close to rational expectations. These recurring bubbles and crashes exhibit characteristics consistent with empirical regularities. William Branch is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of California Irvine. 3 Vol. 18, No. 3 • July 2008 IFO NEWS EURO-ZONE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK The joint Euro-zone Economic Outlook forecast, produced in collaboration between the Ifo Institute, INSEE in Paris and ISAE in Rome, was released on July 9, as usual timed to coincide with Eurostat’s second release of quarterly national accounts. The joint report contains estimations (for the previous quarter) and shortterm forecasts (for the current and following quarters) for real GDP, consumption, industrial production, investment and inflation in the Euro-zone. Euro-zone real GDP expanded on a strong note in Q1 2008, after the disappointing performance in Q4 2007. However, the acceleration clearly overstated the underlying trend. Real GDP growth is forecast to slowdown considerably in the coming quarters, expanding at rates of 0.0% in Q2 and 0.3% in both Q3 and Q4. Industrial production is losing momentum, thereby reflecting the continuous downward tendency of business surveys due to worsening expectations. Private consumption is expected to grow by 0.2% in Q2 and 0.3% in both Q3 and Q4. Real disposable income growth is likely to remain weak as increases in nominal wages are eroded by high inflation rates. Investment is expected to expand on a modest path, with rates of -0.3% in Q2, a correction of the sharp increase in Q1, and 0.3% in both Q3 and Q4. On the assumption that oil prices stabilise at USD 135 per barrel of Brent and that the dollar/euro exchange rate fluctuates around 1.57 over the forecast horizon, inflation should peak at 4.0% in Q3, before easing gradually to 3.5% in Q4. DARKENING GROWTH PROSPECTS Euro-zone real GDP picked up in Q1 2008, rising by 0.7%, after a disappoint- 4 ing 0.4% in Q4 2007. The expansion was mainly driven by exceptionally high economic growth in Germany. Economic growth in France and Italy was also stronger than in Q4, although more moderate than in Germany, while in Spain it was markedly poor. Private consumption expanded modestly in Q1, mainly hampered by weak real disposable income growth. A recovery of consumption in the coming quarters is unlikely to arise. Although the situation on the labour market r e m a i n s favourable, the decline of unemployment is loosing momentum. Furthermore, the gains from slightly accelerating nominal wages are swept off by high inflation rates. Finally, consumer confidence has deteriorated overall, reflecting the worsening of households’ concerns. Private consumption is therefore expected to expand by a modest 0.2% in Q2 and 0.3% in both Q3 and Q4. Industrial production in the euro zone increased in Q1 2008 by 0.6%, after 0.2% in Q4 2007. In Germany production grew markedly. Also in Italy the rise of production quickened, whereas France posted a more modest growth rate. and expanding at 0.4% in Q3 and 0.3% in Q4. The slack expansion of production is attributed to the unsupportive economic environment associated with a slowdown in domestic and foreign demand, less convenient financial conditions, high energy prices and the unfavourable dollar/euro exchange rate. INFLATION CONTINUES TO RISE Euro-zone headline inflation continued to accelerate, from 3.4% in Q1 to 3.6% in Q2, which is the highest rate since the introduction of the single currency. The increase reflects the sharp rises in commodity prices and their direct impact on energy and food components of the HICP. Under the assumption that the oil price will stabilize at 135 USD per barrel of Brent and that the dollar/euro exchange rate will fluctuate around 1.57 over the forecast horizon, inflation is expected to reach a peak in Q3 (4.0%), before it gradually lowers to 3.5% in Q4 due to a favourable base effect. Average HICP inflation should be 3.6% in 2008, and thus well above the ECB’s 2% reference value for price stability. Core inflation is expected to increase slightly in H2 to 1.8%, from 1.7% in Q2. This forecast is based on the assumption that second-round effects on wages will not materialise, but that there will be some indirect pass-through on core prices, which, however, will be partially offset by a demand slowdown and a delayed effect of the euro exchange rate appreciation. INSTITUTIONS INFLUENCE ECONOMIC GROWTH Despite the good performance of industrial production at the beginning of the year, the downward tendency of business surveys observed in recent months has continued almost throughout the entire euro-zone, reflecting expectations of a slowdown in the coming quarters. In an international comparison, Australia has the best institutional growth conditions. In the past 15 years, Australia has improved seven places, taking over the top position from the United States, now in second place, followed by the Netherlands. Germany finished in mid-range, having fallen from seventh to eleventh among the 24 observed OECD countries. Industrial production is expected to decelerate over the year, stagnating in Q2 in response to the strong increase in Q1, This is the finding of the recent institutional index for OECD countries calculated by Munich’s Ifo Institute. Bulletin