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Aktuelle Meldung:

 Do., 17. Mär. 2016   Schuerenberg-Frosch, Hannah

Neue Publikation von Dr. Schürenberg-Frosch und Dr. Olekseyuk

Eine gemeinsame Arbeit von Dr. Schürenberg-Frosch und der ehemaligen Lehrstuhlmitarbeiterin Dr. Olekseyuk zur Höhe der Armington-Elastizitäten in europäischen Ländern ist nun in der Fachzeitschrift Economic Modelling veröffentlicht. Der Artikel trägt den Titel "Are Armington elasticities different across countries and sectors? A European study" ist unter folgendem Link zugänglich. Ein Auszug aus dem Abstract: CGE models are widely used for policy evaluation and impact analysis especially with respect to trade reforms, tax reforms, energy sector reform and development policy analysis. However, the results of such models are often argued to be sensitive to the choice of exogenous parameters such as trade elasticities. Several authors show that the choice of the so-called Armington elasticities in the demand function has a strong influence on the simulation results. Most existing estimates of Armington elasticities are only for the US. The few studies for other countries find substantially differing results. Nevertheless, many CGE modelers simply adopt the elasticities from other studies disregarding specific country and model characteristics. This paper aims at providing estimated elasticities based on recent data for a larger group of European countries. Using cointegration and panel fixed effects analyses we estimate the first order condition resulting from cost minimization or utility maximization subject to the CES utility or cost function in imports and domestic goods. The results show a rather large variation across sectors and countries and the magnitude is only partly comparable to the US elasticities. Moreover, in a small CGE application we are able to show that changing the elasticity set has a quantitative and even qualitative impact on CGE model results, which confirms the concern that one might end up with biased results due to a misspecification of the elasticities.