This book presents a collection of articles on applied general
equilibrium analysis by major contributors to this field. This
rapidly expanding method of analysis involves the use of computers
to study entire economies and the interrelationships among firms,
households and governments in these economies. There are also
articles on the particular computational techniques involved in the
numerical estimation of these equilibrium models and on several
particular applications. Papers deal with the United States,
Mexican and Australian economies. Other chapters provide an
analysis of long-run energy problems, fiscal federalism and
economic planning.
目錄:
1. The computation of equilibrium prices Herbert E. Scarf
2. Efficient methods of computing economic equilibria Michael J.
Todd
3. Numerical specification of applied general equilibrium models:
estimation, calibration, and data Ahsan Mansur and John
Whalley
4. Econometric methods for applied general equilibrium analysis
Dale W. Jorgenson
5. Money and bonds in a disaggregated open economy Andrew
Feltenstein
6. Modeling structural adjustment: micro and macro elements in a
general equilibrium framework Sherman Robinson and Laura D''Andrea
Tyson
7. General equilibrium analysis of regional fiscal incidence Larry
J. Kimbell and Glenn W. Harrison
8. Decomposing the impact of higher energy prices on long-term
growth Antonio M. Borges and Lawrence H. Goulder
9. A comparison of methodologies in empirical general equilibrium
models of taxation Don Fullerton, Yolanda K. Henderson, and John B.
Shoven
10. Planning models and general equilibrium activity analysis
Victor Ginsburgh and Jean Waelbroeck
11. A general equilibrium model for the Mexican economy Jaime
Serra-Puche
12. Extending the ORANI model of the Australian economy: adding
foreign investment to a miniature version Peter B. Dixon, B. R.
Parmenter and Russell J. Rimmer.