2. General government employment |
Salaries are a major part of general government expenditures. In this experiment, general government employment is raised permanently. Higher employment stimulates consumption, hence output and income rises. The payroll in the public sector is increased by 1000 million kroner in 2005 prices, which provides an additional permanent employment in the public sector of 2370 persons, approximately equal to 0.1 percent of the total employment. (See experiment)
Table 2. The effect of an increase in general government employment
An increase in public sector employment lifts total employment and the overall wage bill. More personal income creates higher domestic demand. Higher demand expands domestic production and employment further. The income multiplier reinforces itself to create higher demand and higher employment.▼ In Keynesian economic theory, the income multiplier refers to the final change in income as compared to the injection of capital deposits or investments which originally fueled the growth. It is usually used as a measurement of the effects of government spending on income. In the present experiment, the income multiplier can be seen as the ratio between the effects on final demand and the change in government expenditure on salaries.
Compared to the public purchase of goods and services experiment, the effect on employment and income is stronger and faster in the present experiment. An increase in public purchases increases imports, and hence part of the public expenditure goes directly into foreign production and foreign employment. In the present shock all initial expenditures go directly into domestic employment. In the short term, the employment effect is approximately twice as large compared to the first experiment. Consequently, short term effects - like the effect on GDP- are also larger in the present experiment.
A rapid increase in employment produces a sharp fall in unemployment, which necessitates a strong increase in wages leading to a significant deterioration of competitiveness. As a result, the fall in exports is more pronounced. Thus, the expansionary effect of the shock is stronger in the short run, but the subsequent fall in net-exports is deeper. The fall in exports reduces domestic production over time and the effect on employment is also reduced at a similar rate. Gradually, employment returns to its baseline, as the permanent increase in employment in the public sector is offset by a permanent fall in employment in the private sector. The displacement of private employment by public employment is the original definition of crowding out, and in terms of employment, there is full crowding out in ADAM.
The crowding out effect also applies to production and demand. The fall in net exports reduces private production, and the fall roughly corresponds to the increase in government production. The higher government consumption is offset by a reduction in net exports so the increase in total demand is much smaller than the increase in public consumption. Government production displaces private production and government consumption displace other demand. In ADAM there is also crowding out in terms of production and demand. But crowding out of production and demand is partial because the higher real wage increases productivity.
There is a positive real wage effect and real disposable income and private consumption increase permanently.▼ Real wage effect arises because wages increase/decrease more than the general price levels due to the deadweight from the non-responding exogenous import prices. This creates a positive/negative real wage effect and real disposable income and private consumption increase/decrease permanently. The consumption equation stabilizes the saving balance of the private sector in the long run, but the public finance deteriorates permanently.▼ If the government chooses to raise taxes in the long run, the higher real wage will not translate to a higher disposable income. The tax increase would reduce the income effect and there would be no permanent positive effect on private consumption and overall domestic production in the long run.
Figure 2. The effect of an increase in general government employment
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