Computable General Equilibrium Models of Trade in the Modern Trade Policy Debate

被引:0
|
作者
Gang Chen
Xue Dong
Patrick Minford
Guanhua Qiu
Yongdeng Xu
Zequn Xu
机构
[1] Cardiff University,Cardiff Business School
[2] Zhejiang University of Finance and Economics,undefined
[3] CEPR,undefined
来源
Open Economies Review | 2022年 / 33卷
关键词
Bootstrap; Indirect inference; Gravity model; Classical trade model; UK trade; F10-14; F16-17;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We set up two rival Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) models of world trade, one based on classical theories of comparative advantage, the other based on recent gravity theories. We have tested them by indirect inference on the time-series of trade facts for four major countries or country blocs: the UK, the US, China and the EU. The UK is a small enough economy for the rest of the world’s behaviour to be treated as exogenous, so we test the UK model with this held constant; the other countries/blocs are large so we test their model by a ‘part of model’ test in which the other world variables are simulated by a reduced form VAR of the unknown true world model. We show by Monte Carlo experiments that these tests have high power. Our findings are that the Gravity version of the world model is rejected strongly for two of these country cases, but passes the test for the other two. By contrast the Classical model is comfortably accepted in all cases; our power experiment implies that this world model is very likely to be close to the truth and should therefore be used for policy analysis. The policy message of the classical model is that protection is damaging to welfare; this includes protection by customs union, where even though some members may gain, general welfare is reduced.
引用
收藏
页码:271 / 309
页数:38
相关论文
共 50 条