Estimated
Economic Effects of Proposed Import Relief Remedies for Steel
Executive
Summary
I. Introduction
II. How
Did We Get Here?
III. Estimated
Impacts of the Proposed Remedies
Appendixes
Technical
Appendix
Technical Appendix
An Overview of the Computational
Model
A. Introduction
B. General
structure
C. Taxes and
policy variables
D. Trade and
transport costs
E. The production
structure
F. The composite
household and final demand structure
G. Labor markets
A. Introduction
This appendix provides
an overview of the basic structure of the computable general equilibrium
(CGE) model employed for assessment of U.S. import restraints on steel.
While this appendix provides a broad overview of the model, it does not
provide a detailed discussion of mathematical structure. Rather, the reader
is referred to Hertel (1996: http://www.agecon.purdue.edu/gtap/model/Chap2.pdf)
[18] for a detailed discussion of the basic algebraic model
structure represented by the core of the model's code. The model is implemented
in GEMPACK -- a software package designed for solving large applied general
equilibrium models. The model is solved as an explicit non-linear system
of equations, through techniques described by Harrison and Pearson (1994).
[19] More
information can be obtained at the following URL -- http://www.monash.edu.au/policy/gempack.php.
Social accounting data are based on the Global Trade Analysis Project
(GTAP) dataset, with updates necessary to benchmark the economic model
to the year 2000. (The default GTAP benchmark year is 1997). Updated
economic data are taken from public sources provided by the U.S. Department
of Labor, the International Monetary Fund, the AISI, and the U.S. Department
of Commerce.
B. General structure
The general conceptual
structure of a regional economy in the model is represented in Figure
A.1. Within each region (both the U.S. and the rest of world are modeled
explicitly as regional economies) firms produce output, employing land,
labor, natural resources, and capital, and combining these with intermediate
inputs. Firm output is purchased by consumers, government, the investment
sector, and by other firms. Firm output can also be sold for export.
Land and natural resources are only employed in some sectors, while capital
and labor (both skilled and unskilled) are mobile between all production
sectors. Capital is fully mobile within regions. However, capital movements
between regions are not modeled, but rather are held fixed in all simulations.
Labor mobility and wage setting are discussed below.
All
demand sources combine imports with domestic goods to produce a composite
good, as indicated in Appendix Figure A.1. These are called "Armington"
composites. Armington composites represent a combination of imported
and domestic goods, which serve as imperfect substitutes for each other.
The relevant set of trade substitution elasticities are presented in Appendix
Table A.1.
The model includes
2 regions (the United States and the rest of world) and 15 sectors. The
list of sectors is shown in Appendix Table A.1. A more detailed definition
of these sectors is provided in Appendix Table A.2.
C. Taxes and policy variables
Taxes are included
in the theory of the model at several levels. Production taxes are placed
on intermediate or primary inputs, or on output. Some trade taxes are
modeled at the border. Additional internal taxes are placed on domestic
or imported intermediate inputs, and may be applied at differential rates
that discriminate against imports. Their actual application in the model
reflects underlying social accounting data. Where relevant, taxes are
also placed on exports, and on primary factor income. Finally, where
relevant (as indicated by social accounting data) taxes are placed on
final consumption, and can be applied differentially to consumption of
domestic and imported goods.
Trade policy instruments
are represented as import or export taxes/subsidies. This includes applied
most-favored nation (MFN) tariffs, antidumping duties, countervailing
duties, and other trade restrictions. We model steel import quotas explicitly,
with quota rents collected by the exporting country. (This is identical
to having an endogenous export tax, whose value is a function of the trade
level determined by the export quota).
D.
Trade and transportation costs
International trade
is modeled as a process that explicitly involves trading costs, which
include both trade and transportation services. These trading costs reflect
the transaction costs involved in international trade, as well as the
physical activity of transportation itself. Those trading costs related
to international movement of goods and related logistic services are met
by composite services purchased from a global trade/transportation services
sector, where the composite "international trade services" activity
is produced as a Cobb-Douglas composite of regional exports of trade and
transport service exports. Trade-cost margins are based on reconciled
f.o.b. and c.i.f. trade data, as reported in the underlying GTAP dataset.
E. Production structure
The basic structure
of production is depicted in Appendix Figure A.2. Basically, intermediate
inputs are combined into a composite intermediate, and this composite
intermediate is in turn combined with value added to yield a final product.
For example, in the auto sector, steel is combined with plastics, machinery,
and other physical inputs, and through value added activities (involving
workers, equipment, and energy) yields automobiles as final output. At
all stages this is represented by CES production functions. The value-added
substitution elasticities are presented in Appendix Table A.1.
F.
The composite household and final demand structure
Final demand is determined
by an upper-tier Cobb-Douglas preference function, which allocates income
in fixed shares to current consumption, investment, and government services.
This yields a fixed savings rate. Government services are produced by
a Leontief technology, with household/government transfers being endogenous.
The lower-tier nest for current consumption is specified as taking a constant
difference elasticity (CDE) functional form. The regional capital markets
adjust so that changes in savings match changes in regional investment
expenditures. (Note that the Cobb-Douglas demand function is a special
case of the CDE demand function employed in the model code. It is implemented
through GEMPACK parameter files.)
The basic structure
of demand is based on Armington preferences, as illustrated in Appendix
Figure 2. Under this approach, goods are differentiated by country of
origin, and the similarity of goods from different regions is measured
by the elasticity of substitution. Formally, within a particular region,
we assume that demand goods from different regions are aggregated into
a composite import according to the following CES function:
(1)
In equation (1), Mj,i,r
is the quantity of Mj from region i consumed in region
r. The elasticity of substitution between varieties from different regions
is then equal to sMj , where sMj=1/(1‑rj).
Composite imports are combined with the domestic good qD in
a second CES nest, yielding the Armington composite q.
(2)
The elasticity of
substitution between the domestic good and composite imports is then equal
to sDj, where sDj=1/(1-bj).
At the same time, from the first order conditions, the demand for import
Mj,i,r can then be shown to equal
(3)
where EM
j,r represents expenditures on imports in region r on the sector
j Armington composite.
In practice, because
we have a two region model (the U.S. and rest-of-world), the two Armington
CES nests are collapsed to a single nest. This implies that the substitution
elasticities in equations (1) and (2) are equal. These elasticities are
reported in Appendix Table 1.
G. Labor markets
Starting from our benchmark equilibirum, we model a recessionary, or "soft"
labor market, with an allowance for unemployment. To allow for limited
labor market flexibility and unemployment, we employ a labor market specification
where wages are held fixed and employment levels adjust. The result is
that, as firms experience rising costs, they release workers to compensate.
Appendix Figure A.1 - Basic
Features of the Simulation Model
Specification
of production in a representative sector
Production
and trade flows
Appendix
Figure A.2 - Armington Aggregation Nest
Appendix
Table A.1 - Model parameters
| |
A
|
B
|
| |
trade
substitution elasticities
|
elasticity
of substitution in production
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
Food
|
2.00
|
0.62
|
|
2
Other primary products
|
3.00
|
0.21
|
|
3
Mining
|
3.00
|
0.2
|
|
4
Steel
|
3.00
|
1.26
|
|
5
Non-ferrous metals
|
3.00
|
1.26
|
|
6
Fabricated metal products
|
3.00
|
1.26
|
|
7
Chemicals, rubber, and plastics
|
2.00
|
1.26
|
|
8
Refineries
|
2.00
|
1.26
|
|
9
Automobiles and parts
|
5.00
|
1.26
|
|
10
Transport equipment
|
5.00
|
1.26
|
|
11
Electrical machinery
|
3.00
|
1.26
|
|
12
Non-electrical machinery and equipment
|
3.00
|
1.26
|
|
13
Construction
|
2.00
|
1.4
|
|
14
Other manufactures
|
3.00
|
1.26
|
|
15
Services
|
2.00
|
1.39
|
| |
|
|
|
source:
GTAP database.
|
|
|
note: The same
trade elasticity of substitution for steel is reported by K.A. Reinert
and D.W. Roland-Holst (1992), "Disaggregated Armington Elasticities
for the Mining and Manufacturing Sector," Journal of Policy Modeling,
4:5.
Food
(p)
1110 Agricultural & livestock production (paddy rice only)
(p) 1120 Agricultural services (servicing paddy rice production only)
(p)
1110 Agricultural & livestock production (wheat only)
(p) 1120 Agricultural services (servicing wheat production only)
(p)
1110 Agricultural & livestock production (grains except wheat &
rice only)
(p)
1120 Agricultural services (servicing production of grains, except wheat
& rice only)
(p) 1110 Agricultural & livestock production (non‑grain crops
only)
(p) 1120 Agricultural services (servicing non‑grain crops production
only)
(p)
1110 Agricultural & livestock production (wool only)
(p) 1120 Agricultural services (servicing wool production only)
(p)
1110 Agricultural & livestock production (other livestock production
only)
(p)
1120 Agricultural services (servicing other livestock production only)
(p)
3116 Grain mill products (processed rice only)
3111
Slaughtering, preparing and preserving meat
3112
Manufacture of dairy products
3113
Canning and preserving of fruits and vegetables
3114
Canning, preserving & processing of fish, crustaceans and similar
foods
3115 Manufacture of vegetable and animal oils & fats
(p) 3116 Grain mill products (except processed rice)
3117
Manufacture of bakery products
3118 Sugar factories and refineries
3119 Manufacture of cocoa, chocolate & sugar confectionery
3121 Manufacture of food products n.e.c.
3122 Manufacture of prepared animal feeds
3131 Distilling, rectifying & blending spirits
3132 Wine industries
3133
Malt liquors and malt
3134 Soft drinks & carbonated waters industries
3140 Tobacco manufactures
Other Primary Production
1130 Hunting, trapping
& game propagation
1210
Forestry
1220 Logging
1301
Ocean and coastal fishing
1302 Fishing n.e.c.
Mining
2100
Coal mining
(p) 3540 Manufacture of miscellaneous products of petroleum and coal (briquettes
only) **
(p)
2200 Crude petroleum & natural gas production (oil only)
(p)
2200 Crude petroleum & natural gas production (gas only)
(p) 3530 Petroleum refineries (LPG only) **
2301
Iron ore mining
2302 Non‑ferrous ore mining
2901
Stone quarrying, clay and pits
2902
Chemical and fertiliser mineral mining
2903 Salt mining
2909 Mining and quarrying n.e.c.
Steel
3710
Iron and steel basic industries
Other Non-ferrous Metals
3720
Non‑ferrous metal basic industries
Fabricated Metal Products
3811
Manufacture of cutlery, hand tools and general hardware
3812 Manufacture of furniture and fixtures primarily of metal
3813
Manufacture of structural metal products
3819
Manufacture of fabricated metal products except machinery & equipment
n.e.c.
Chemicals, rubber, and
plastics
3511
Manufacture of basic industrial chemicals except fertilisers
3512
Manufacture of fertilisers and pesticides
3513
Manufacture of synthetic resins, plastic materials and man‑made
fibres except glass
3521
Manufacture of paints, varnishes and lacquers
3522 Manufacture of drugs and medicines
3523
Manufacture of soap and cleaning preparations, perfumes and cosmetics
3529 Manufacture of chemical products n.e.c.
3551
Tyre and tube industries
3559
Manufacture of rubber products n.e.c.
3560 Manufacture of plastic products n.e.c.
Refineries
(p)
3530 Petroleum refineries (except LPG) **
(p) 3540 Manufacture of miscellaneous products of petroleum and coal (except
briquettes) **
Automobiles and parts
3843
Manufacture of motor vehicles
3844 Manufacture of motorcycles and bicycles
Transportation equipment
3841
Ship building and repairing
3842 Manufacture
of railroad equipment
3845
Manufacture of aircraft
3849 Manufacture
of transport equipment n.e.c.
3821 Manufacture of
engines and turbines
Electrical machinery
3831
Manufacture of electrical industrial machinery and apparatus
3832
Manufacture of radio, television and communication equipment and apparatus
3833
Manufacture of electrical appliances and housewares
3839
Manufacture of electrical apparatus and supplies n.e.c.
Non-electrical machinery
and equipment
3822
Manufacture of agricultural machinery and equipment
3823
Manufacture of metal and wood working machinery
3824
Manufacture of special industrial machinery and equipment except metal
and wood working machinery
3825
Manufacture of office, computing and accounting machinery
3829
Machinery and equipment except electrical n.e.c.
3851 Manufacture of
professional and scientific,and measuring and controlling equipment, n.e.c.
3852
Manufacture of photographic and optical goods
3853 Manufacture of watches and clocks
Construction
5000
Construction
Other manufactures n.e.c.
3211
Spinning, weaving & finishing textiles
3212 Manufacture of made‑up textile goods excluding wearing apparel
3213
Knitting mills
3214
Manufacture of carpets & rugs
3215
Cordage, rope & twine industries
3219
Manufacture of textiles n.e.c.
3220
Manufacture of wearing apparel, except footwear
3311
Sawmills, planing & other wood mills
3312 Manufacture of wooden & cane containers & small caneware
3319
Manufacture of wood & cork products n.e.c.
3320
Manufacture of furniture & fixtures, except primarily of metal
3411
Manufacture of pulp, paper & paperboard
3412
Manufacture of containers & boxes of paper and paperboard
3419
Manufacture of pulp, paper & paperboard articles n.e.c.
3420
Printing, publishing & allied industries
3231
Tanneries & leather finishing
3232 Fur dressing & dyeing industries
3233 Manufacture
of products of leather & leather substitutes,except footwear and
wearing apparel
3240
Manufacture of footwear, except vulcanised or moulded rubber or plastic
footwear
3610
Manufacture of pottery, china and earthenware
3620
Manufacture of glass and glass products
3691
Manufacture of structural clay compounds
3692
Manufacture of cement, lime and plaster
3699
Manufacture of non‑metallic mineral products n.e.c.
3901
Manufacture of jewellery and related articles
3902
Manufacture of musical instruments
3903
Manufacture of sporting and athletic goods
3909
Manufacturing industries n.e.c.
Services
4101
Electric light and power
4102
Gas manufacture and distribution
4103
Steam and hot water supply
4200
Water works and supply
6100
Wholesale trade
6200
Retail trade
6310 Restaurants, cafes, and other eating and drinking places
6320
Hotels, rooming houses, camps and other lodging places
7111
Railway transport
7112
Urban, suburban and inter‑urban highway passenger transport
7113
Other passenger land transport
7114
Freight transport by road
7115
Pipeline transport
7116
Supporting services to land transport
7121
Ocean and coastal transport
7122
Inland water transport
7123
Supporting services to water transport
7131 Air transport carriers
7132
Supporting services to air transport
7191
Services incidental to transport
7192
Storage and warehousing
7200
Communication
0
Activities not adequately defined
8101 Monetary institutions
8102
Other financial institutions
8103
Financial services
8200
Insurance
8310 Real estate
8321
Legal services
8322 Accounting, auditing and bookkeeping services
8323 Data processing and tabulating services
8324 Engineering, architectural and technical services
8325 Advertising services
8329
Business services, except machinery and equipment rental and leasing,
n.e.c.
8330 Machinery and equipment rental and leasing
9411
Motion picture production
9412
Motion picture distribution and projection
9413
Radio and television broadcasting
9414
Theatrical producers and entertainment services
9415
Authors, music composers and other independent artists n.e.c.
9420
Libraries, museums, botanical and zoological gardens,and other cultural
services, n.e.c.
9490 Amusement and recreational services n.e.c.
9511
Repair of footwear and other leather goods
9512 Electrical repair shops
9513
Repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles
9514
Watch, clock and jewellery repair
9519 Other repair shops n.e.c.
9520
Laundries, laundry services, and cleaning and dyeing plants
9530
Domestic services
9591
Barber and beauty shops
9592 Photographic
studios, including commercial photography
9599
Personal services n.e.c.
9100
Public administration and defence
9200
Sanitary and similar services
9310
Education services
9320 Research and scientific institutes
9331
Medical, dental and other health services
9332
Veterinary services
9340 Welfare institutions
9350
Business, professional and labour associations
9391
Religious organisations
9399 Social and related community services n.e.c.
9600
International and other extra‑territorial bodies
[18] Hertel, T., ed., (1996),
Global Trade Analysis, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge
MA.
[19] Harrison, W.J. and K.R.
Pearson (1994), An Introduction to GEMPACK, Second edition.
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