scholarly journals A Study on the Developing a New “Output Requirements Model” in Interindustry Analysis: Based on the Circulation System of Production between Final Demand, Total Output, and Final Output

2008 ◽  
Vol 57 (null) ◽  
pp. 3-18
Author(s):  
Ho Un Gim
1986 ◽  
Vol 117 ◽  
pp. 20-29

Fuller data confirm the impression which we formed in May that OECD countries' total output did not change much in the first quarter. It probably increased by about ¼ per cent, with even this small rise attributable wholly to stock movements in the US. Final demand in the US fell and there were declines in total output in a number of countries, including Japan, Germany, Australia, the Netherlands, Switzerland and possibly Italy (for which there are conflicting estimates), white France achieved only marginal growth. The fall was notably severe in Germany, where construction suffered badly in the cold winter. This probably had a wider impact also, and, in North America at least, the initial effect of the slump in oil prices seems to have been depressive, with drilling activity sharply reduced, especially in the US. There may also have been a tendency for expenditure, perhaps on investment in particular, to be deferred in the expectation of falling prices and interest rates.


1975 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 22-38

After levelling out in the second quarter the total output of the industrial countries increased quite sharply in the third. The rise was, however, heavily concentrated in the United States. Production has begun to increase also in Japan and Canada and, more recently, in France and West Germany. But it has become increasingly clear that in the smaller countries of Western Europe the main impact of the recession had to a considerable extent been delayed rather than avoided. So far, moreover, the recovery in the major countries has depended heavily on the reduction or reversal of the previous liquidation of stocks and on high rates of government spending. There appears as yet to be only a very limited revival in final demand for consumer goods and still little immediate prospect of a recovery in business fixed investment. So long as this remains true, confidence that a fairly rapid rate of growth will be sustained for the next year or two must be tempered with caution.


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