Applying General Equilibrium

Voorkant
Cambridge University Press, 29 mei 1992 - 299 pagina's
The aim of this book is to make more widely available a body of recent research activity that has become known as applied general equilibrium analysis. The central idea underlying this work is to convert the Walrasian general equilibrium structure (formalized in the 1950s by Kenneth Arrow, Gerard Debreu and others) from an abstract representation of an economy into realistic models of actual economies. Numerical, empirically based general equilibrium models can then be used to evaluate concrete policy options by specifying production and demand parameters and incorporating data reflective of real economies. Shoven and Whalley describe all aspects of developing applied general equilibrium models, including developing an appropriate equilibrium structure, calibrating the model, compiling counterfactual equilibria, and interpreting results. The authors contend that the Walrasian general equilibrium model provides an ideal framework for appraising the effects of policy changes on resource allocation, assessing who gains and who loses, and the policy impacts not well covered by empirical macro models. The applications in the book illustrate a number of ways in which fresh insights are provided in long standing policy controversies.
 

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Inhoudsopgave

General equilibrium theory
9
Computing general equilibria
37
Applying the techniques
69
Designing an applied general equilibrium model
71
Using applied general equilibrium models
103
A Harberger taxmodel application
134
A general equilibrium model of US tax policies
153
Policy applications
195
Global trade models
197
Singlecountry trade modeling
230
Analysis of price controls
256
Conclusion
279
References
283
Index
291
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Pagina 2 - ... that only relative prices are of any significance in such a model. The absolute price level has no impact on the equilibrium outcome. Equilibrium in this model is characterized by a set of prices and levels of production in each industry such that the market demand equals supply for all commodities (including disposals if any commodity is a free good). Since producers are assumed to maximize profits, this implies that in the constant-returns-to-scale case, no activity (or cost-minimizing technique...
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