Search results for " general equilibrium models"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

A general equilibrium analysis of climate change impacts on tourism

2006

This paper studies the economic implications of climate-change-induced variations in tourism demand, using a world CGE model. The model is first re-calibrated at some future years, obtaining hypothetical benchmark equilibria, which are subsequently perturbed by shocks, simulating the effects of climate change. We portray the impact of climate change on tourism by means of two sets of shocks, occurring simultaneously. The first set of shocks translate predicted variations in tourist flows into changes of consumption preferences for domestically produced goods. The second set reallocate income across world regions, simulating the effect of higher or lower tourists' expenditure. Our analysis h…

Computable general equilibriumGeneral equilibrium theoryNatural resource economicsStrategy and ManagementClimate changejel:C68Transportation010501 environmental sciencesDevelopment01 natural sciencesjel:L83/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/climate_actionEffects of global warming0502 economics and businessEconomicsSDG 13 - Climate ActionDeadweight lossEconomic impact analysiscomputable general equilibrium model0105 earth and related environmental sciencesConsumption (economics)05 social sciencesjel:D58jel:Q51climate change13. Climate actionjel:Q54Tourism Leisure and Hospitality Management8. Economic growthtourismClimate change Computable general equilibrium models Tourism050212 sport leisure & tourismTourism
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Macroeconomic Modelling in EMU: How Relevant is the Change in Regime?

2007

We analyse the likely effects of changes in the monetary and financial regimes of EMU countries on the dynamics of output and inflation. In particular, we evaluate the impact of the regime shift on the forecasting performance of reduced-form models. Data for both the pre-EMU and the EMU regimes are generated by a relatively standard open-economy-DSGE model with sticky prices and wages and restricted access to financial markets for some individuals. We find that the effects of the shift in the monetary regime on the processes followed by macroeconomic variables depend on the nature of the shocks hitting the economy. For plausible shocks distributions the reduction in the accuracy of VAR-base…

InflationMacroeconomicsmedia_common.quotation_subjectMacroeconomic modellingFinancial marketjel:E32Restricted accessMonetary economicsjel:E37forecasting general equilibrium models monetary union inflation and output dynamicsjel:E17EconomicsRegime shiftmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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