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A Dynamic Model with Vertical Specialization, Credit Chains, and Incomplete Enforcement


Karsten Jeske


Mellon Capital Management - Research

November 2002

Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Working Paper No. 2002-21

Abstract:     
This paper sets up a model to account for differences in total factor productivity due to differences in enforcement of contracts. Vertical specialization generates the need for intra-period credit, because final goods producers cannot pay their intermediate goods suppliers before they produce their final good. The paper shows that if there are enforcement problems, the capital distribution is skewed in the sense that intermediate goods producers operate at lower capital levels and higher marginal products of capital than final goods producers. This wedge is created by the price for intermediate goods, which is lower in economies with bad enforcement. For this reason, the high-productivity firms in the intermediate goods sector have no incentive to grow and the low-productivity firms in the final goods sector, benefiting from low intermediate goods prices, have no incentive to shrink, which causes productivity to be lower in countries with bad enforcement.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 34

Keywords: vertical specialization, limited enforcement, productivity

JEL Classification: E10, E23

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Date posted: January 27, 2003  

Suggested Citation

Jeske, Karsten, A Dynamic Model with Vertical Specialization, Credit Chains, and Incomplete Enforcement (November 2002). Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Working Paper No. 2002-21. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=355420 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.355420

Contact Information

Karsten Jeske (Contact Author)
Mellon Capital Management - Research ( email )
595 Market Street
Suite 3000
San Francisco, CA 94105
United States
415-546-6056 (Phone)
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