Modeling developing countries' policies in general equilibrium /

Policies affecting resource allocation across tradable sectors and those affecting the incentives to produce tradable activities are key determinants of macroeconomic balance and growth. Computable general equilibrium models have made significant contributions to both types of policies. With advance...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: De Melo, Jaime (Author)
Corporate Authors: World Scientific (Firm)
Published: World Scientific Pub. Co.,
Publisher Address: Singapore ; Hackensack, N.J. :
Publication Dates: 2015.
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: World Scientific Studies in International Economics ; 41
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/8787#t=toc
Summary: Policies affecting resource allocation across tradable sectors and those affecting the incentives to produce tradable activities are key determinants of macroeconomic balance and growth. Computable general equilibrium models have made significant contributions to both types of policies. With advancements in computing power and software, these models have become easy to implement and are now widespread. The question then is when and how to formulate them to avoid the 'black box' syndrome. This book seeks to address these issues through carefully selected essays that analyse how to model general equilibrium linkages in a single economy, across developing and developed economies, and across both micro and macro policies. Micro policies examined include tariffs quotas and VERs, the choice of taxes to maximize government revenue, migration and remittances, and the political economy of tariff setting. Applications on macro policies cover capital inflows, real exchange rate determination, and the modeling of the effects of adjustment policies on income distribution. The book provides insights on the development of a family of models for diverse policy choices, focusing on the ways to model the following: links between tradable and non-tradable activities, labor markets, and portfolio choices given limited capital mobility. Selected essays are all inspired by specific policy problems, including the adaptation to external shocks (i.e. oil), consequences of capital inflows, determinants of migration and associated remittances, the productivity of foreign aid, and rent-seeking activities under trade regimes with non-price trade restrictions. Examples in this book lay out the theoretical foundations, alongside a variety of applications, to help formulate coherent and transparent models for policy analysis. Archetype economies are extensively used to show how differences in economic structure influence the effects of policies. Graduate students and policy analysts interested in modeling will find this a useful compendium of studies.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource (xxiii, 529 pages) : illustrations.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN: 9789814494816
Index Number: HC59
CLC: F112.1
Contents: pt. I. Capturing economy-wide linkages. ch. 1. Product differentiation and the treatment of foreign trade in computable general equilibrium models of small economies / Sherman Robinson -- ch. 2. Productivity and externalities: Models of export-led growth / Sherman Robinson -- ch. 3. A general equilibrium analysis of foreign exchange shortages in a developing economy / Kemal Dervis and Sherman Robinson -- ch. 4. Productivity growth, external shocks and capital inflows in Chile: A general equilibrium analysis / Timothy Condon and Vittorio Corbo -- ch. 5. Exchange rate-based disinflation, wage rigidity and capital inflows: Tradeoffs for Chile 1977-81 / Timothy Condon and Vittorio Corbo -- ch. 6. Adjustment and income distribution: A micro-macro model for counterfactual analysis / Fran cois Bourguignon and William Branson -- ch. 7. Computable general equilibrium models for trade policy analysis in developing countries: A survey -- pt. II. Archetype economies. ch. 8. Alternative routes to development / Hollis Chenery, Jeffrey Lewis and Sherman Robinson -- ch. 9. Trade adjustment policies and income distribution in three archetype developing economies / Sherman Robinson -- ch. 10. Distributional effects of adjustment policies: Simulations for archetype economies in Africa and Latin America / Francois Bourguignon and Akiko Suwa -- ch. 11. Modeling the effects of protection in a dynamic framework / Kemal Dervis -- ch. 12. Lobbying, counterlobbying, and the structure of tariff protection in poor and rich countries / Olivier Cadot and Marcelo Olarreaga -- ch. 13. Globalization and migratory pressures from developing countries: A simulation analysis / Riccardo Faini and Jean-Marie Grether -- pt. III. Costs of protection from trade policy regimes in developing countries. ch. 14. Distortions in the factor market: Some general equilibrium estimates -- ch. 15. Trade policy and resource allocation in the presence of product differentiation / Sherman Robinson -- ch. 16. An evaluation of neutral trade policy incentives under increasing returns to scale / David Roland-Holst -- ch. 17. Industrial organization and trade liberalization: Evidence from Korea / David Roland-Holst -- ch. 18. Industrial organization implications of QR trade regimes: Evidence and welfare costs / Timothy Condon -- ch. 19. Market access and welfare under free trade agreements: Textiles under NAFTA / Olivier Cadot, Celine Carrere and Alberto Portugal-Perez -- pt. IV. Estimating the costs of US foreign trade policy. ch. 20. Welfare costs of US quotas in textiles, steel and autos / David Tarr -- ch. 21. VERs under imperfect competition and foreign direct investment: A case study of the US-Japan auto VER / David Tarr -- ch. 22. Industrial policy in the presence of wage distortions: The case of the US auto and steel industries / David Tarr -- ch. 23. Revenue-raising taxes: General equilibrium evaluation of alternative taxation in US petroleum industries / Julie Stanton and David Tarr.