Abstract

The paper considers several determinants of profitability (investment rate, trade surplus, and budget deficit) in the OECD economies in the 1960–2014 period, using the Kalecki's profits equation framework. We estimate and utilise the aggregate profit rate measures for the total economy, employ a series of panel unit root and panel cointegration tests, and apply panel vector autoregressive (PVAR) model to examine the relationship between the profit rate and its determinants in the short- and long-run. The empirical evidence supports the hypothesis of positive effects of trade surplus on profitability, in line with Kaleckian views concerning the cyclical and secular dynamics of profits and profit restoration forces in the capitalist economies. The positive effects of investment rate on profitability are not confirmed, while the effects of fiscal activism on profitability are demonstrably negative; in contrast, a strong positive influence of profit rate on the pace of capital accumulation (investment) is indicated. The results are robust across sub-periods and panels with smaller cross-sectional dimension. Empirical results highlight the divergence between real investment and profitability, capital formation slowdown, and fiscal policy implementation problems in OECD economies over recent decades.

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