Abstract

Computable general equilibrium (CGE) models provide valuable insights into economy-wide and aggregate sectoral impacts of trade policies. However, when it comes to the assessment of specific interventions, the level of aggregation in these models is often deemed too coarse to inform negotiations. For example, in the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) Data Base, all vegetables, fruits and nuts – over hundred individual commodities – are represented under one sector. Analysis at the tariff line level is typically provided by partial equilibrium (PE) models, which cannot, however, capture economy-wide effects. In this paper, we contribute to the development of the GTAP-HS framework, which comprises disaggregated values of output, trade flows and domestic absorption with supporting model components nested within the standard GTAP GE model. We construct the GTAP-HS database with GTAP vegetables, fruits and nuts sector disaggregated into 79 commodities. We apply this modelling framework to the assessment of the ongoing trade frictions between the United States and its trading partners. We find that there are significant advantages to using this nested approach to trade policy analysis, including possibilities of the trade policies assessment at the tariff line, representation of the commodity-specific substitution and avoidance of the ‘false competition’ critique.

Highlights

  • Computable general equilibrium (CGE) models have become a widespread method to capture the economy-wide and sectoral impacts of agricultural trade policies (Fontagné et al, 2013; Francois et al, 2013; Egger et al, 2015; Beckman and Arita, 2016; Taheripour and Tyner, 2018; Chepeliev et al, 2018)

  • We construct the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP)-harmonized system (HS) database with GTAP vegetables, fruits and nuts sector disaggregated into 79 commodities

  • We present a new modeling framework to analyze changes in trade policies implemented at the tariff line in vegetables, fruits and nuts sectors

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Summary

Introduction

Computable general equilibrium (CGE) models have become a widespread method to capture the economy-wide and sectoral impacts of agricultural trade policies (Fontagné et al, 2013; Francois et al, 2013; Egger et al, 2015; Beckman and Arita, 2016; Taheripour and Tyner, 2018; Chepeliev et al, 2018). In the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) database used with many CGE models (Aguiar et al, 2019b), all vegetables, fruits and nuts are represented under one sector In reality, this sector covers more than one hundred tariff lines, each with potentially different changes in trade policies. While bilateral trade flows and protection rates are readily available at the tariff line level (ITC, 2018), this is not the case for the values of domestic output and demand To estimate these values, Grant et al (2007) use constrained optimization to minimize deviations at the aggregate sectoral level, given disaggregated trade data.

GTAP-HS model and database
GTAP-HS model
GTAP-HS database
Substitution at the disaggregated commodity level
Trade in Scenario 1
Trade in Scenarios 2 and 3
Economy-wide impacts in the three Scenarios
Limitations and critical assumptions of the developed approach
Conclusions
14: Behavioral
Tables for
Other vegetables
27 Ely 28 OthServices
AgExp 9 India Canada USA Mexico
Full Text
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