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HomeEventsIntroducing More Flexible Modelling of Regional Household Consumption and Saving Decisions Into The Dynamic GTAP Model
Introducing more flexible modelling of regional household consumption and saving decisions into the dynamic GTAP model

This event is hosted by the Crawford School of Public Policy and the East Asian Bureau of Economic Research at The Australian National University.

A dynamic version of the GTAP model of the global economy became available in 2012. The dynamic version known as GDyn, introduced partial adjustment mechanisms for capital accumulation and a dynamic accounting of capital-finance and related income flows between regional households and firms, and a global trust. This paper builds on this original work by including a revised modelling of investment and capital-finance flows to reach a long-run equilibrium in which model rates of return are equal and stable over time. This paper then further adds to the capabilities of the GDyn model by: (i) relaxing the assumption of fixed shares in the consumption-saving decisions of national households; and (ii) providing for the inclusion of exogenously determined changes in national consumption-saving choices. The revised model — termed GDyn-FS — is used to: infuse forecast reductions in saving as a proportion of domestic income for China in a model base line; and, against this base line, simulate a decline in the willingness to invest in a medium-sized open economy.

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Date & time

  • Tue 14 May 2019, 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Location

Seminar Room 2, Crawford School of Public Policy, #132 Lennox Crossing, The Australian National Univ

Speakers

  • Paul Gretton, Associate at the ANU Centre for European Studies

Contact

  •  Paul Gretton
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