ON THE PLAUSIBILITY OF THE SUPPLY‐DRIVEN INPUT‐OUTPUT MODEL
- 1 May 1988
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Regional Science
- Vol. 28 (2) , 203-217
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9787.1988.tb01208.x
Abstract
The supply‐driven input‐output model is, in all its aspects, the complete reverse of the traditional, demand‐driven input‐output model. Several authors have used it to indicate the strength of the industrial forward linkages in the economy at hand. Others have used it to indicate the impact of specific supply shortages on output levels. Finally, it has been used as a general description and projection vehicle for entire economies that are thought of as being supply‐constrained, such as centrally planned economies.This paper critically reviews this literature and concludes that most of these applications suffer from more or less severe theoretical flaws. It is argued that using the supply‐driven model as a descriptive device to indicate the strength of forward linkages is justified. In the case of impact studies, straightforward use of the model is criticized and a more careful estimation procedure is suggested. For the purpose of a general description of a supply‐driven economy, a dynamic optimization model is proposed to replace the theoretically implausible, supply‐driven input‐output model.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- CAPACITY LIMITATIONS, INVENTORY, AND TIME‐PHASED PRODUCTION IN THE SEQUENTIAL INTERINDUSTRY MODELPapers in Regional Science, 1986
- An interregional labour market model incorporating vacancy chains and social securityPapers in Regional Science, 1985
- Input-output Models for Regional Demographic-Economic Analysis: Some Structural ComparisonsEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1985
- Analytical Assumptions and Causal Ordering in Interindustry ModelingSouthern Economic Journal, 1984
- Alternative approaches to the estimation of economic impacts resulting from supply constraintsThe Annals of Regional Science, 1984
- Evaluating land reclamation plans for Northern Friesland: An interregional cost-benefit and input-output analysisPapers in Regional Science, 1983
- Summary Measures of Interconnectedness for input-output ModelsEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 1983
- Industrial cluster analysis-backward or forward linkages?The Annals of Regional Science, 1982
- A NOTE ON A NEGLECTED ASPECT OF INTERSECTORAL FLOWS ANALYSIS*Journal of Regional Science, 1980
- An Intersectoral Flows Analysis of the California EconomyThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1963