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Modelling the EU agriculture and policy: Departing from the first best world. Alexandre Gohin Alexandre.Gohin@rennes.inra.fr 122 EAAE Seminar February 17-18 2011 Ancona (Italy). Operational market models. PE models AGLINK COSIMO CAPRI ESIM AGMEMOD FAPRI PEATSIM IMPACT ATPSM.
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Modelling the EU agriculture and policy: Departing from the first best world Alexandre Gohin Alexandre.Gohin@rennes.inra.fr 122 EAAE Seminar February 17-18 2011 Ancona (Italy)
Operational market models • PE models • AGLINK COSIMO • CAPRI • ESIM • AGMEMOD • FAPRI • PEATSIM • IMPACT • ATPSM • CGE models • GTAP Agri • MIRAGE • LEITAP(MAGNET) • LINKAGE(ENVISAGE) • GLOBE • GTAPPEM • « ID3-Momagri »
Messages of the presentation • PE models should be used with CGE thinking • Impact of energy prices on agriculture • Wealth effects of direct payments • CGE models should be used in second best world • Labor market rigidities • Imperfect price transmission • More modelling efforts should be devoted to dynamic, stochastic and financial issues • The issue of expectations and the costs of information • Downside risk aversion
1.a. Impacts of energy prices on agricultural prices • Biofuels + • Quid of the contribution of market forces / policy instruments • Production costs + • Transport/processing costs – • Macro-economic effects ? • Mostly ignored in PE analysis • CGE results : macro-economic closure matters
Our methodological approach • Starting point : GTAP standard model (GTAP 6 database) • Introduction of GTAP-E and GTAP-Agr specifications • Latent separability here • Three macro-economic closures • Da = f(Pa) : No budget constraint • Da = f (Pa, Pe, Income=Income0) Fixed income • Da = f(Pa,Pe,Income) CGE • 20% decrease of oil reserve
1.b. Wealth effects of direct payments • Large literature on the coupling effects of lump sum payments • No longer production neutral with market failures (fixed costs, credit constrained, …) • Wealth effects of risk averse farmers (with DARA) • Overall limited effects • What is wealth ?
Standard specification Our modelling contribution :
2. CGE results in second best • Welfare computed by CGE models can be decomposed in initial distortions and endowments effects : • EV = sum(i, tmi*Mi) + sum(f, wf*Qf) • By definition all policies should be removed. A policy can be welfare improving only due to the presence of other policies. • Where are the market imperfections ? Public goods, externalities, imperfect competition, informational failures?
2.a. First illustration • Starting with the standard GTAP framework : • A PE version where prices and productions of other goods, regional incomes and wages are fixed • A « Distorted » GE model with wage rigidity and unemployment (like Harrison et al (1993) or Mercenier (1995)). • Simulation of a complete removal of the CAP.
“Producer surplus” (cap+land) Crop Animal Services Taxpayer “surplus” Values of preceding taxes/subsidies -24.0 -41.8 +32.8 +51.0 Standard GE -24.8 -42.2 - +50.2 PE +49.7 -24.4 -42.0 +2.5 Distorted GE “Consumer surplus” Disposable income EV -13.4 +8.9 - +29.7 -40.8 -19.1 “Total Welfare” +8.9 +12.8 -19.1 Welfare impacts
2.b. « Real » figures • Using the own made CGE model on EU • Removing the CAP • Without imperfections • With imperfect price transmission • With unemployment
3. Dynamic, stochastic analyses • Most available models are not truly dynamic, nor stochastic (no risk aversion) • Dynamics involve expectations • Two main theories in the past : rational expectations (forward looking) and nerlovian expectations (backward looking) • The information is not costless. What is the structure of information used by economic agents in our models, in real life ?
3.a. Dynamic effects : trade reforms • First version : Gtap agri static • Second version : consistent dynamic CGE model with rational expectations (more difficult to solve) • Third version : Temporary GE with succession of static CGE models where dynamic decisions are made with imperfect knowledge of the future • Simulation of trade liberalisation by the EU and US
3.b. Policy implications • When designing policy reforms, trade off between economic and political economy pressures • Because people need to learn, there may be an optimal way of implementing policy reforms • How long should be the implementation period of CAP reforms ?
3.c. Risk analyses to third order • Use of the mean variance approach does not recognize that price series may be skewed (due to storage issues in particular) • Downside risk aversion not really taken into account • Analysis of the interaction between biofuel and food markets with focus on volatility
Concluding comments • Coupling models is interesting • But efforts should also be spend on dynamic and stochastic issues • Our direction : understand future markets and interaction with real economy • More generally analyse one fondamental issue justifying agricultural policy: risk in agriculture