Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP3159
Authors: Michael Dueker; Andreas M. Fischer
Abstract: The objective of this note is to document the importance of improvements relative to the other forms of capital spending and to determine whether improvements have similar cyclical properties as maintenance and repair. To shed some light on these issues, we look at a unique data set on Swiss road spending. The data on road spending are broken down into new roads, road improvements, and road maintenance and repair (hereafter road maintenance). The long-run evidence finds that road improvement is larger in size than road maintenance and exhibits similar dynamic properties as road maintenance. This result strengthens the view of McGratten and Schmitz (1999) that countercyclical spending of firms on maintenance (and on improvement) of existing capital is too large to be ignored.
Keywords: capital utilization; improvements; maintenance and repair
JEL Codes: E22; E30
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
road improvements (R42) | road maintenance (R42) |
road improvements (R42) | GDP (E20) |
road maintenance (R42) | GDP (E20) |
new road investment (R42) | GDP (E20) |
maintenance and improvements (R42) | GDP (E20) |