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Title: INGENUE v.2:


1
INGENUE v.2
  • a World OLG-CGE Model
  • with Imperfect Financial Markets, Exchange Rates
  • and Stochastic Lifetime

2
INGENUE Team
  • INGENUE is a joined research project linked to
    three French centers CEPII, CEPREMAP and OFCE.
  • The members of the team
  • CEPII Michel Aglietta Vladimir Borgy
  • CEPREMAP Michel Juillard
  • OCDE Jean Château
  • OFCE Jacques Le Cacheux,
  • Gilles Le Garrec Vincent Touzé.

3
Aim of this research
  • The aim of this research is to analyze the issues
    relating to wealth accumulation and the
    development of pension funds and other devices of
    saving for retirement in the context of global
    finance, hence to study the international capital
    flows that ought to be induced by the differences
    of aging and of technical progress growth in the
    various regions of the world.

4
Related Literature
  • This model is the second version of a
    multi-region, world model, in the spirit of those
    theoretically described by Obstfeld Rogoff
    (1996), in which the structure of each regional
    economy is similar to that of other national
    Overlapping Generations Compu-tational General
    Equilibrium (OLG-CGE) models, such as Auerbach et
    al. (1983) for US, Cazes et al. (1992, 1994) for
    France, except that labor supply is generally
    endogenous.

5
  • Two similar models
  • FEHR, H., S. JOKISCH, L. KOTLIKOFF, (2004)
    ''The role of immigration in dealing with world's
    demographic transition'', NBER WP, n10512.
  • and
  • BOERSCH-SUPAN A., A. LUDWIG J. WINTER (2002)
    ''Ageing and International Capital Flows'', in
    Auerbach, A.J. and H. Herrmann (eds.), Ageing,
    Financial Markets and Monetary Policy, Springer,
    Heidelberg, 56-83.
  • They have developed two applied multi-regional
    OLG-CGE models, but their analysis is restrained
    to developed countries.

6
Outline of the talk
  • INGENUE v.2 What's new?
  • (2) The world in 10 Regions
  • (3) Demographic projections
  • (4) Description of the regional economies
  • (5) Dynamic general equilibrium
  • (6) The empirics of INGENUE
  • The baseline case
  • Pension reforms vs Migratory policy

7
INGENUE v.2 What's new?
  • In INGENUE v1, the world was divided into six
    regions (three developed areas and three
    developing areas), each of which is made of three
    categories of economic agents the households,
    the firms, and a PAYG retirement pension system.
    There was only one good, and only one financial
    asset, which is an ownership stake in the firms'
    productive capital both of them are freely
    traded on perfectly competitive world markets.

8
  • There was no money and hence only two relative
    prices in each region the (real) wage rate
    accruing to local, internationally immobile,
    workers and the single (real) price of financial
    assets, both expressed in terms of goods, which
    may be chosen as numéraire. Hence, the various
    regions of the world were economically and
    financially perfectly integrated and there is
    only one world market for goods and one for
    financial assets. We have performed various
    pioneer works (2001, 2002a, 2002b and 2004 with
    IMF) with this first model but this model could
    appear to be limited in some of its outcomes.
  • So we developed this new version.

9
  • In this second version, we make the model more
    realistic by introducing a number of changes in
    the assumptions
  • Demographics The World is now divided in 10
    regions. In order to make autonomous own
    demographic projections, we have built a
    population projection model based upon UN
    coefficient methods.
  • Households We now assume uncertainty in lifetime
    expectancy at individual level. At the
    macroeconomic level there is still no
    uncertainties about it.

10
  • International trade of commodities In order to
    deal with relative price movements of foreign and
    domestic goods we assume that the different
    countries produce, different imperfectly
    substitutable intermediate goods as in Backus et
    al. (1995). This will imply the existence of real
    effective exchange rates between the different
    regions. Here the main determinants of exchange
    rates are the relative productivity in the two
    productive sectors as in the standard view
    developed since Obstfeld and Rogoff works (i.e.
    the famous Balassa-Samuelson effect that is
    predominant in long run explanations of
    difference in real exchange rates).

11
  • Financial markets We model region-specific
    interest rates to debtor that differ from the
    unique world interest rate to creditor by
    imposing an ad hoc convex function of the
    regional ownership ratio.
  • Calibration improvements We introduce
    inheritances based upon a bequest motive,
    age-specific labor participation rates
    (exogenous), age-specific human capital
    (exogenous) and labor income of children in some
    parts of the world.

12
(2) The world in 10 Regions
  • Z1 Western Europe with United Kingdom, Italy,
    Spain, France, Germany, etc.
  • Z2 Eastern Europe with Bulgaria, Czech Republic,
    Hungary, Poland, etc.
  • Z3 Northern America with Canada, United States
    of America, Australia, New Zealand, etc.
  • Z4 Southern America with Argentina, Bolivia,
    Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Nicaragua, etc.
  • Z5 Japan
  • Z6 Mediterranean World with Algeria, Egypt,
    Morocco, Tunisia, Western Sahara, Armenia, Iraq,
    Iran, etc.
  • Z7 Chinese World with China, Democratic People's
    Republic of Korea, Mongolia, Republic of Korea,
    Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, etc.
  • Z8 Africa with Burundi, Comoros, Djibouti,
    Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Senegal,
    etc.
  • Z9 Russian World with Belarus, Russian
    Federation, Ukraine, etc.
  • Z10 Indian World with India, Afghanistan,
    Indonesia, Malaysia, etc.

13
World Regions in Ingenue 2.
North America Western Europe Eastern
Europe Russian World South America Mediterranean
World Indian World Chinese World Africa Japan
14
(3) Demographic projections
  • The period of the model is set to five years. In
    each region z, the economy is populated by 21
    overlapping generations of one-sex agent who may
    no live longer than 105 years.
  • Population evolution are exogenously calculated
    according to a standard population projection
    method on the basis of historical and prospective
    UN data. We have aggregated population structure,
    with the UN data from 1950 to 1995, over
    countries to build Ingenue's regions. Then we can
    project fertility and mortality trends (for both
    sexes) at the region-aggregate level, this
    together with initial population structures in
    1995, allow us to obtain population evolution in
    the future from 2000 until the ending date of the
    model. We implicitly assume that there is no
    migration flows in the future. With some usual
    population projection methods, we construct
    evolution of mortality and fertility tables on
    the only basis of life expectancy and global
    fertility rates evolutions in the future.

15
Mortality People can die before 105 year let
sa denotes the conditional probability of
surviving between age a and age a1, the number
of age a-1 people then changes as
Fertility Process At each time period, the
number of births will be equal to
(here L is only female population), where fz(a)
are the average age-specific fertility rates.
Following UN projections, we implicitly assume
that women fertility occurs only between 15 and
50 years old.
16
Size of the World Population according to four
fertility rate convergence scenarios
17
(No Transcript)
18
  • Western Europe and Japan, which are the regions
    with decreasing labour force from the present or
    the next decade onwards amongst the most
    developed regions.
  • Eastern Europe, and the Russian world, ageing as
    fast the former from a much lower level of income
    per capita.
  • North America (including also Australia and new
    Zealand) and the Chinese world (China and
    surrounding East Asian countries) whose labour
    force growth will turn slightly negative around
    2020.
  • South America, the Mediterranean world (including
    non-European countries around the Mediterranean
    Sea and the Near East) and the larger Indian
    world (including Pakistan and South East Asia on
    top of India). These regions have already been
    involved in the process of ageing but they will
    keep a growing labour force until 2050.
  • Africa is the region where the demographic
    transition has hardly started and whose working
    age population will still grow at 2 per annum in
    2050.

19
(4) Description of the regional economies
  • Households
  • Individuals are assumed to become adults when
    they turn 20. During any period, the household
    sector is then made of 17 overlapping cohorts of
    adults'', of age between 20 and 105, and 4
    cohorts of young''. Adults may not stay in the
    labor force after a legal maximal mandatory
    retirement age R. They determine their optimal
    designs of consumption and saving with rational
    foresight concerning their intertemporal income
    constraint after taxes wages, interest rates
    and retirement pensions.
  • The length of the life is stochastic and there
    exist two types of insurance contract actuarial
    return saving contract and capital insurance for
    heirs in case of premature death.
  • Between 15 and 50 yrs. adults are supposed to
    give birth to children, according to the
    fertility calendar. Children are dependent until
    they turn 20, they consume with a cost per child
    that is supposed to be proportional to the
    parents consumption.

20
  • Labor supply is assumed to be exogenously given
    as the age-specific rate of participation to
    labor market. We use ILO data and projections to
    characterize activity from 1950 until 2015 and
    assume that after this date participation rates
    remain fixed at their 2015 level. According to
    this database people may work since the age of 10
    so we will take into account children labor
    income to the budget constraint of their parents.
  • The intertemporal preferences are given by a
    life-time utility function over uncertain streams
    of consumption and leaving a voluntary insured
    bequest H to their children.

21
  • The public sector
  • The public sector is reduced to a social security
    department it is a pay-as-you-go (PAYG) public
    pension scheme, that is supposed to exist in all
    regions of the world. It is financed by a payroll
    tax (?) on all labor incomes and pays pensions to
    retired households. The regional PAYG systems
    operate according to a defined-benefit rule
    pensions paid to individual retired are a
    fraction - or replacement rate (?) -- of the
    current average (net of tax) wage. We assume a
    time-to-time balanced-budget rule.
  • Notation La size of the population of age a.

22
Regional productive sectors
  • Intermediate good sector
  • Each zone z specializes in the production YI of a
    single intermediate good labeled z, where
    subscript z indicates that the specific nature of
    this good lies in its region of origin.
    Production takes place with a constant return to
    scale-Cobb Douglas production function using
    capital stock and the full domestic labor force.
  • The production of intermediate good (YI) also
    denotes GDP in the country z in terms of the
    local intermediate good.

23
  • Final good production sector
  • In the spirit of Backus et al. (1995), we assume
    that the domestic, composite final good of region
    z (consumption and investment) YF is produced
    thanks to a combination of two intermediate goods
    a domestic'' intermediate good in proportion
    Bz and a World'' intermediate goods in
    proportion Mz , according to the following CES
    technology, where s denotes the elasticity of
    substitution

24
  • The fiction of a world producer of an homogenous
    world intermediate good
  • In order to simplify the exchanges of
    intermediate goods between regions of the world
    we assume that there exist a fictive world
    producer that uses region-specific intermediate
    goods in quantities Xz in order to produce a
    specific world intermediate good Y according to
    the following CES function

25
Imperfection on capital market
  • To be more realistic the world asset capital
    market is supposed imperfect. Because sources of
    imperfection and asymmetries in financial markets
    are various and uneasy to model with rigorous
    micro-foundations in such a large scale model as
    INGENUE we adopt an ad hoc formulation where the
    rate of industrial failure in a country is linked
    to the rate of indebtedness. We introduce a sort
    of Stiglitz-Weiss constraint. Then, the average
    creditor interest rate for firms in a country
    depends on the national level of indebtedness
    with respect to the rest of the world.

26
(5) Dynamic General Equilibrium
  • Households maximize their welfare
  • Firms maximize their profit in the intermediate
    good sector, the final good sector and the world
    good
  • Markets are cleared at each date.

27
  • We compute intertemporal prices (real local wage,
    real local prices of goods, real local interest
    rate) to equilibrate
  • Regional closed markets
  • Labor market
  • Final good market.
  • Regional open markets
  • Intermediate good markets
  • Capital markets.
  • The world market
  • World good market.

28
(6) The empirics of INGENUE
  • Calibration to reproduce some stilized facts
  • TFP, profiles of saving and investment rates,
    real exchange rate, pension contribution rates,
    etc.
  • Main sources of Data
  • Penn World Tables (cf. Summers Heston)
  • IMF
  • OECD.

29
The Exogenous Catching up
  • To project the evolution of the TFP, we use a
    exogenous law reflecting international diffusion
    of technological progress and we adopt different
    paces of convergence. The level of total factor
    productivity in the zone at the technological
    frontier (North America) is . It is supposed to
    grow at 1.5 per year with g1.5. The
    diffusion of technological progress to a zone z
    is given by the following equation

30
  • The first bracket captures the speed-up in the
    rate of technological progress due to the
    shortening of diffusion in technological
    innovations. It means that ? is an accelerator to
    the convergence in the growth rates (the chosen
    value is 0.001) The second bracket embodies a
    brake due to the difficulties to create the
    social conditions proper to assure a speedy
    diffusion. ? is the brake factor to the
    convergence in level. There is a caveat however.
    To make account for the attractiveness of Europe
    upon its neighbour regions we assume that these
    regions will converge to the European target.

31
Fig. 4 - Total Factor Productivity 1960
2100 (percentage of US level)
32
Start of our simulation 1955. The departure
point of our numerical analysis 2000.
Calibration strategy the model must match the
historical data in 2000.
  • To do this simply, and in order to avoid any
    initial jump in the equilibrium variables, we
    choose to start our simulation in year 1955,
    taking as given, first, the historical values for
    state variable in 1950, and demographic and
    participation rates historical trajectories and
    projections. We then choose parameters and
    exogenous trajectories for sectorial factor
    productivity in order to get values for the
    endogenous variables of the model near their
    observed values in 2000.

33
  • To reproduce the selected stylized facts for each
    region considered, the time preference parameters
    are neither set constant nor similar between the
    different regions during the calibration period
    (i.e. between 1955 and 1995). After 2000, the
    value is only different for N. America.
  • Furthermore, the regional parameters of the CES
    production functions are calibrated in order to
    reproduce the international trade shares for each
    regions.
  • In the calibration process, the relative
    productivity between sectors are set in order to
    reproduce the exchange rates, and the human
    capital variables are calibrated in order to
    reproduce the GDP per capita levels.

34
(7) The Baseline Case a path for the world
economy in the first part of the XXIst Century
  • General remarks
  • The baseline scenario is the outcome of a long
    and weary process of calibration.
  • To put the model on an acceptable track on the
    projection phase starting in 2000, an adjustment
    must be made. It is why the model computation
    shall begin at an initial date as far in the past
    as the data permit it. The initialisation is the
    five year period beginning in 1950 where initial
    stocks of capital, household assets and an age
    distribution of savings are estimated.
  • Assumptions regarding technological convergence
    are conservative in the baseline scenario.
  • The baseline scenario is not easy to depict
    since it is a dynamic rational expectations
    general equilibrium.

35
Fig. 5 - Regional annual interest rate
  • The regional real interest rates are declining
    over the fifty year period. This is due to global
    ageing (the working age population is
    decelerating or declining absolutely while the
    age group of high savers is growing in one region
    after another) and to a declining catching up.
  • The hierarchy of regional real interest rates is
    linked to the rate of change of the real exchange
    rates.

36
Fig. 6 Regional GDP (PPP) growth rate
  • The GDP regional growth rates largely follow that
    of the regional labor force and TFP growth rates.

37
Fig. 8 - Evolution of the gross investment to
GDP ratio
  • Because the model works at full employment with
    an exogenous labour force, the stock of capital
    (and the investment by difference) in each period
    is a rising function of employment adjusted for
    labour efficiency (age distribution) and of total
    factors productivity. It is a decreasing function
    of regional real interest rate.

38
Fig. 7 - Evolution of the Net Saving(in
percentage of GNP)
  • Net saving in each region is the aggregate of
    individual savings in the life cycle. It depends
    on the demographic structure (high savers ratio
    and dependency ratio), on the expectation of
    future income and on the parameters of the PAYG
    pension systems.
  • Regions with the fastest-increasing dependency
    ratios are the ones with the fastest-decreasing
    net saving rate (Japan, Western Europe, Eastern
    Europe, Russia).
  • In China, India, South America and the
    Mediterranean, the high savers ratio and the
    dependency ratio rise in tandem. In the early
    decades, while the population is still young,
    those regions grow faster than more
    demographically mature ones. It follows that
    young people expecting higher future income,
    reducing the overall saving rate.

39
Fig. 10 Ownership ratio
  • The ownership ratios are mainly determined by
    cumulative current account balances (by
    difference, around the slope of the curve).
  • The most striking feature is the divergent
    profile of North America. It is due to an assumed
    change in household behaviour.
  • Japan and Western Europe remain continuously in
    surplus but less and less with the augmentation
    of their dependency ratio.
  • The Mediterranean region is in surplus for most
    of the time but goes into a slight deficit in the
    last two decades.
  • Africa, India and Eastern Europe, with large
    current account deficits at the start of the
    century, are reducing it as long as their growth
    rate is diminishing and their households save
    more because they get older and richer.

40
(8) Pension reforms v.s. Migratory policy
  • We now propose to investigate the consequences,
    in our model, of two kinds of pension reforms in
    Europe and of a migratory scenario, keeping the
    institutions in other regions of the world
    identical to baseline.

41
Pension reforms
  • Constant contribution rate (CCR) Maintaining the
    European pension contribution rate to the level
    it reached at the end of the XXth century (18)
    (see left-hand side of figure 14). The result is
    a progressive and significant decline of the
    replacement rate as European population ages by
    2050, it would be reduced by 55. But in the
    baseline scenario, keeping the replacement rate
    constant induces a marked increase in the
    contribution rate that reaches 32 by
    mid-century, and stabilizes around 25 in the
    very long run, in the aftermath of the baby-boom
    shock.

42
Pension reforms
  • Postponing the legal retirement age (PRA) legal
    retirement age is progressively postponing over
    the period 2000-2025. In the baseline case, about
    22 of West-European aged 60-64 are working in
    2020. With the PRA reform put in place, 55 of
    West-European aged 60-64 are working (see
    left-hand side of figure 13). In this scenario,
    the replacement rate is held constant at its 2000
    level, and, as a result, the contribution rate
    increasesless than in the baseline scenario it
    reaches 27 in 2050.

43
Migratory policy
  • Migratory scenario We also investigate the
    macroeconomic consequences of a specific
    migratory scenario. Such a scenario cannot be
    considered strictly as a pension reform.
    Nevertheless, the comparison with pension reforms
    scenarios seems accurate as increased labor
    mobility could alleviate the financial burden on
    the public retirement system (by limiting the
    increase of the dependency ratio and therefore
    the rise of the contribution rate).

44
Fig. 13 Pension Reforms in Europe
45
Fig. 14 Pension Reforms in Europe
  • Migratory flows are substantial between 2005 and
    2025 such that the dependency ratio is very close
    to the one that we get in the PRA case.
  • From 2025 and until 2055, no migrant moves
    intoWestern Europe but the dependency ratio is
    then below the one of the PRA case as the
    children of the first cohorts of migrants are
    entering the labour force.
  • In 2050-2060, the dependency ratio will peak at
    the same level in the two scenarios (about 0.8
    compared with 1.0 in the baseline scenario).

46
Macroeconomic consequences
  • Two keys to understand what is happening
  • Regional supply shock
  • or/and
  • Regional demand shock

47
Fig. 15 Saving rate
  • Because labour supply is exogenous, the saving
    effect is the only direct effect on households,
    and it corresponds to a change in the time
    profile of their budget constraint.
  • PRA The financial needs at the end of life are
    lower.
  • CCR The weight of pension retirement decreases.
    The effect on savings is positive.
  • Migratory scenario There is a negative shock on
    gross wage but the contribution rate diminishes.

48
Fig. 17 Comsumption per capita (difference
from baseline scenario)
49
Fig. 18 Trade Balance as a of GDP
(difference from baseline scenario)
50
Fig. 16 Real exchange rate (difference from
baseline scenario)
  • A negative (resp. positive) demand shock tends
    to decrease the price of the final goods and
    therefore, leads to a depreciation (resp.
    appreciation) of the real exchange rate.
  • A negative (resp. positive) supply shock tends
    to increase the price of the final goods and
    therefore, leads to a appreciation (resp.
    depreciation) of the real exchange rate.
  • -PRA positive demand and supply shocks.
  • CCR negative demand shock (in the medium term)
    and positive supply shocks (via supplemental
    capital) .
  • Migratory scenario negative demand shock and
    positive supply shock.

51
Fig. 19 Ownership ratio
52
Fig. 20 Annual rate (difference to baseline
trajectories)
53
Distributional consequences
54
Fig. 21 Average consumption by age-groups (
changes to BS)
  • - Over the next fifty years, the CCR reform seems
    to be the more accurate policy in order to
    redistribute resources to people with less than
    60 years-old.
  • In the PRA case, the main effect of the reform
    is to increase directly European GDP with the
    employment. The resulting increase in the
    European wage bill leads to an important rise in
    the consumption.
  • In the migratory scenario, we have two effects
    in terms of consumption positive via the
    decrease of contribution rate and a better
    retirement (dominant for aged people) and
    negative via the malthusian effect of capital
    dilution (the wage decreases dominant for young
    people but in the long run, the capital per head
    is higher).

55
Some concluding remarks
  • We studied the consequences of pension reforms in
    W. Europe. Our conclusions concern mainly the
    economic changes and not the welfare incidence
    (computable but not given here).
  • The success of PRA scenario is linked to the
    fact that the labor supply have no social cost.

56
  • Several papers have studied the specific question
    of the migratory scenario. Contrary to others
    models, the INGENUE model is fit to describe the
    consequences of migrations on both the regions
    receiving and losing migrants (Migrationasymmetri
    c shocks. Effects on other countries not given
    here).
  • This work is in progress and we have in
    preparation analyses of different paces of aging.

57
Other slides
58
Regional accounts
The trade balance
The regional equilibrium
59
The world market equilibrium for the world
intermediate good implies that the sum of trade
balance over the world is equal to zero
The world market is cleared at time t - 1 this
implies that it also clears at time t
60
Some useful properties
  • Investment behavior
  • Savings behavior
  • Real Exchange Rate Interest rate parity
    regional shocks of demand or supply

61
Fig. 11 Current account (as a of GDP)
62
Fig. 9 Real Exchange Rate
63
Fig. 12 Trade balance (as a of GDP)
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