Applying General EquilibriumCambridge 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. |
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 |
| 283 | |
| 291 | |
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aggregate applied general equilibrium applied models assumed assumption benchmark equilibrium BFSW billion calculated calibration capital income Cobb-Douglas commodity compensating variations composite computational consumer consumption tax corporate tax costs data set defined denote developing countries dividends domestic economy effects elasticity of substitution endowments equal equation equi equilibrium model equivalent variations estimates excess demand functions expenditure expenditure function export export-demand external-sector factor prices fixed point four-region model Harberger household import import-supply incorporated industry input-output inputs intermediate involves label LDCs Lorenz curve Merrill's algorithm nontraded OPEC output P₁ parameters personal income tax Plan price controls price of capital procedure production functions region rent seeking revenue savings Scarf's algorithm sector seven-region model Shoven and Whalley specification sumer Table tariffs tax model tax rates terms of trade tion trade models two-sector unit simplex utility function vertex Walras's law Whalley white markets world prices zero zero-profit conditions
Populaire passages
Pagina 2 - ... the absolute price level has no impact on the equilibrium outcome. Thus, equilibrium is characterized by a set of relative prices and levels of production by each industry such that 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...
Pagina 2 - ... each with an initial endowment of commodities and a set of preferences. The latter yield household demand functions for each commodity, with market demands given by the sum of individual consumer's demands. Commodity market demands depend on all prices, are continuous, non-negative...
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...
Pagina 1 - Commodity market demands depend on all prices, are continuous, nonnegative, homogeneous of degree zero (ie, no money illusion) and satisfy Walras' Law (ie, that at any set of prices, the total value of consumer expenditures equals consumer incomes). On the production side, technology is described by either...

