The Production and Inventory Behavior of the American Automobile Industry

57 Pages Posted: 7 Jan 2008 Last revised: 10 Dec 2022

See all articles by Olivier J. Blanchard

Olivier J. Blanchard

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); Peterson Institute for International Economics

Date Written: May 1982

Abstract

Understanding inventory movements is central to an understanding of business cycles. This paper presents an empirical study of the behavior of inventories in the automobile industry. It finds that inventory behavior is well explained by the assumption of intertemporal optimization with rational expectations. The underlying cost structure appears to have substantial costs of changing production as well as substantial costs of being away from target inventory, the latter being a function of current sales. Given this cost structure, whether inventory behavior is stabilizing or destabilizing depends on the characteristics of the demand process. In the automobile industry, inventory behavior is destabilizing: the variance of production is larger than the variance of sales.

Suggested Citation

Blanchard, Olivier J., The Production and Inventory Behavior of the American Automobile Industry (May 1982). NBER Working Paper No. w0891, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=351415

Olivier J. Blanchard (Contact Author)

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Peterson Institute for International Economics ( email )

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