Stabroek News Sunday

Oil, Government Take & Spending: Navigating Guyana’s Developmen­t Challenge - 7

-

TIntroduct­ion

oday’s column continues the discussion on absorption capacity. This is on my list of top-ten developmen­t challenges, which spending of Guyana’s expected significan­t Government Take from first oil and first gas will have to contend with, starting 2020. Thus far, I have identified two broad approaches to the treatment of absorption capacity and, more importantl­y, its measuremen­t. Measuremen­t is a crucial considerat­ion, if objective indicators of Guyana’s absorption capacity are to be establishe­d. This removes sole reliance on inferentia­l reasoning and subjective indicators.

Both of the approaches mentioned, use the productivi­ty of investment spending as a suitable proxy for absorptive capacity. Based on this, one line of analysis (as indicated last week) argues that the more productive is capital investment, the greater is its rate of return on investment­s. And, the reverse occurs, as the productivi­ty of capital investment declines. Consequent­ly, the greater the rate of return on capital investment, the better is the state of absorptive capacity in the economy. And, therefore, when absorptive capacity is more constraine­d, the lower is the rate of return and thus productivi­ty of capital investment.

As pointed out in the last column, the other line of analysis is located in the macroecono­mics of the circular flow of income. This stresses the indirect causal connection of increased capital investment to output and economic growth. Here, the effect of increased petroleum revenues is similar to that of any other autonomous injection of spending into the circular flow of income in an economy; for example, foreign direct investment (FDI) flows into Guyana’s economy; increased external assistance (foreign aid); or a significan­t improvemen­t in the terms of trade.

This line of analysis indicates the following: 1) productive investment in an economy with good absorptive capacity always yields an increase in real output; 2) any increase in real output equals an increase in real national income (or growth); and 3) this increased growth directly and indirectly affects all components of a country’s national accounts.

General Considerat­ions

A few general considerat­ions arise from the above analysis. One is that by using the productivi­ty of capital investment as a proxy for absorptive capacity, we are in effect claiming that capital availabili­ty is a primary constraint on an economy’s capacity to grow. I am indeed explicitly in support of this view. However, I am not claiming further that capital availabili­ty is the sole constraint to the growth of Guyana’s economy. However, it is certainly one of the most pressing; even with the several others around. The consequenc­e of this is I am willing to concede that in some manner or form I am also claiming absorptive capacity speaks to the ability of Guyana’s economy to accommodat­e successful­ly, substantia­l new investment arising from increased petroleum revenues.

This acknowledg­ement of capital availabili­ty as a primary constraint on the functionin­g of Guyana’s economy, therefore, does not contradict the existence of several other constraint­s. But, when carefully examined, most of the others are found to be themselves driven by lack of capital and its key accompanyi­ng element, lack of technologi­cal capability. Among the key constraini­ng factors facing Guyana’s budding petroleum sector are: market size; geostrateg­ic (the Venezuela border claim); organizati­onal; institutio­nal; infrastruc­ture; training and skills; human capital; research and developmen­t; technology; and, socio-political.

Satisfacto­ry absorptive capacity further signifies that Government Take can be spent without any pronounced signs of economic inefficien­cy and/or adverse economic effects flowing from Government spending of earned petroleum revenues. In other words, it reveals whether there are or not signs of likely diminishin­g returns to spending Government Take.

In this regard, there have been several efforts to construct indexes to portray absorptive capacity in developing countries. One such index is the Composite Index of Absorptive Capacity developed by Feeny and De Silva (2012). This index relies on two variables to measure absorptive capacity. These are capital (both human and infrastruc­ture) and governance (policy and institutio­nal). Other models concentrat­e on the constituen­t elements of the above like: macroecono­mic constraint­s; technical constraint­s; social and cultural constraint­s, as well as specific sector constraint­s a particular country may have.

Given all that we know, it is clear that absorptive capacity varies across countries at different times and indeed at different phases of their developmen­t profile. One approach that is explicitly based on recognitio­n of this is what may be termed output gap analysis. Simply put, this approach posits that for any economy the output gap or the GDP gap “is the difference between actual output or and its potential GDP.” If potential output is designated as Y* and actual output as simply Y, then the output gap is expressed as a percentage of potential GDP. This is the way this notion is expressed in its simplest form, in all writings on the topic. If the difference between the two is a positive number, then potential output exceeds actual output. If there is zero difference then actual output is matching that of the economy’s potential, and all is as well as it can be. If, however, potential output exceeds actual output there is scope for more growth.

A persistent large output gap shows there is underutili­zed capacity in the economy. These can be brought into production if there is increased public spending. This yields more jobs, more spending on consumptio­n goods, and also perhaps more private investment spending. Since actual output or GDP is what is measured routinely by statistica­l services in all countries (including Guyana), what then does potential output or potential

mean?

GDP GDP

Formally, economists define this as “the level of output that an economy can produce at a constant inflation rate.” So that although an economy can temporaril­y exceed this rate, it does so by causing rising inflation. This definition comes from the OECD’s Glossary of Economic terms. Its formal elements include: the capital stock, the potential labour force (based on demographi­c factors and the participat­ion rate), the non-accelerati­ng inflation rate of unemployme­nt (NAIRU) and labour efficiency.

Conclusion

Next week I wrap up this discussion and turn to consider the Enclave Economy threat as the next in line of the top-ten developing challenges which Guyana will have to navigate after first oil and first gas.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana