Lecture 5 Scenario Design for Regional Demand System - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

Lecture 5 Scenario Design for Regional Demand System

Description:

24 Sep. 2003, CAS-CCAP, Beijing. Outline. The basic of demand system ... Source: CHINAGRO Working Package 1.7: Income Growth and Life-style Change, by CCAP-CAS ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:40
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: sow52
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Lecture 5 Scenario Design for Regional Demand System


1
Lecture 5 Scenario Design for Regional Demand
System
  • Laixiang Sun
  • LUC, IIASA, Austria
  • SOAS, University of London, UK

CHINAGRO 2nd Training Course 24 Sep. 2003,
CAS-CCAP, Beijing
2
Outline
  • The basic of demand system in an AGE setup.
  • Why must the design be systematic?
  • What can we learn from households surveys?
  • What can we learn from international comparison?
  • Our approaches to have a systematic design.
  • Concluding remarks.

3
1. Basic of demand system in an AGE setup
1.1. Linear expenditure system Most convenient
(discrete in time) setup for scenario design
  • Choose Stone-Geary utility function for each
    individual consumer
  • Maximising utility s.t. budget constraint yields
    the linear expenditure system

4
1. Basic of demand system in an AGE setup
1.2. Relationship between elasticities
expenditures
Partially differentiating the LES yields these
relationships
  • In econometric analysis, we use households
    expenditure pattern to estimate elasticities.
  • In scenario design, we involve in a reverse
    process Use acceptable future elasticities to
    establish future expenditure patterns (various
    shares).

5
2. Why must the design be systematic?
  • Fine tuning income elasticities is not
    sufficient.
  • It may violate consistent and constraint
    conditions given before (Section 1), including
    adding-up, symmetry, homogeneity, and
    non-negativity.
  • It may lead to infeasible marginal shares of
    expenditures.
  • Troublesome Engel properties.
  • The typical problems of translating cross-section
    patterns into time-series patterns.
  • The case of consumption vs saving in USA.
  • Is it possible to have a systematic fine-tune?
  • We may need more help from plural perspectives.

6
3. What can we learn from surveys?
  • Estimate current patterns of consumption and
    expenditures across regions, rural and urban
    divisions, and income groups (an example from
    CCAPs tables).
  • Various shares.
  • Matrixes of elasticities (w.r.t. price,
    expenditure, and income).
  • Understand the limitation of the estimation based
    on cross-section or pooling data.
  • Same utility function
  • Same probability distribution
  • The estimates are suggestive or illustrative, but
    not deterministic!

7
Source CHINAGRO Working Package 1.7 Income
Growth and Life-style Change, by CCAP-CAS
8
3. What can we learn from international
comparison?
  • Estimate consumption patterns across the
    development spectrum (different p.c. GDP levels).
  • Difficulty Engel curves across development
    spectrum is non-linear.
  • Marginal and average budget shares are also
    non-linear across development spectrum.
  • These non-linearity is of fundamental importance
    for demand scenario design and analysis!

9
Example 1a Average (fitted) budget shares for
food products (at mean PPP prices, 1985)
Reference Changes in the Structure of Global
Food Demand, by J. Cranfield, T. Hertel, J.
Eales, P. Preckel, Purdue University, 1998.
10
Example 1b Marginal budget shares for food
products (at mean PPP prices, 1985)
Reference Changes in the Structure of Global
Food Demand, by J. Cranfield, T. Hertel, J.
Eales, P. Preckel, Purdue University, 1998.
11
Example 2 Non-parametric estimation of meat
demand and per-capita income (1975-97)
Reference Can We Feed the Animals? The Impact
on Cereal Markets of Rising World Meat Demand,
by M. Keyzer, M. Merbis, I. Pavel, C. van
Wesenbeeck, SOW-VU, 2003.
12
4. Our approaches to have a systematic design
  • 4.1. Basic Strategy
  • Run estimations and simulations based on AIDADS
    or extended LES with switches to establish
    relationship between consumption patterns (shares
    and expenditure elasticities) and income growth.
  • Incorporate this externally calibrated
    relationship into the AGE with Stone-Geary form
    of utility function.
  • The relationship can also be projected to the
    time dimension, with the help of an externally
    calibrated income growth patterns across regions,
    rural urban divisions, and income groups.

13
4. Our approaches to have a systematic design
  • 4.2. Basic on AIDADS
  • AIDADS stands for An Implicit, Directly Additive
    Demand System.
  • It has been regarded as the best practice
    benchmark model to detect the relationship
    between consumer demand and income growth.
  • It starts from an implicitly directly additive
    utility function as follows.

14
4. Our approaches to have a systematic design
  • 4.2. Basic on AIDADS
  • Solving the 1st order cost minimization
    conditions yields the budget share form
  • If ag ßg for all g, AIDADS simplifies to the
    LES.

Reference Estimating consumer demands across
the development spectrum Maximum likelihood
estimates of an implicit direct additivity
model, by J. Cranfield, P. Preckel, J. Eales
T. Hertel. Journal of Development Economics, 68
(2002), 289-307. Projecting world food demand
using alternative demand systems, by W. Yu, T.
Hertel, P. Preckel, J. Eales, Purdue University,
2002.
15
4. Our approaches to have a systematic design
  • 4.3. Basic on extended LES with switches
  • Demand function is as follow
  • The indirect utility function of this system has
    close-form expression and meets the requirements.
  • Its marginal and average expenditure shares
    changes across the switching points.

16
5. Concluding remarks
  • Fine tuning income elasticites alone may lead to
    inconsistency and a systematic scenario design of
    demand system is needed.
  • Systematic design means to integrate plural
    perspectives and best-available information into
    a consistent framework. Consistency across income
    levels (or over time) is essential.
  • Given the fact that improvement in data and
    estimation models/techniques is evolutionary,
    improvement in scenario design will follow the
    same track as well.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com