Modeling Trade and Income Distribution in Six Developing Countries: A Dynamic General Equilibrium Analysis up to the Year 2050

33 Pages Posted: 15 Apr 2020 Last revised: 24 Feb 2024

See all articles by Wolfgang Britz

Wolfgang Britz

University of Bonn

Yaghoob Jafari

University of Bonn

Olexandr Nekhay

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Roberto Roson

Ca Foscari University of Venice - Dipartimento di Economia; Bocconi University - IEFE Centre for Research on Energy and Environmental Economics and Policy

Date Written: April 10, 2020

Abstract

This paper presents an empirical exercise, aimed at investigating the implications on poverty and income distribution of a reference scenario (SSP2) of economic development. It does so by coupling a dynamic general equilibrium model of the global economy, specifically designed to capture structural change dynamics in the medium and long run, with detailed micro data on household income in six countries: Albania, Bolivia, Ethiopia, Malawi, Nicaragua and Vietnam. We also consider an alternative scenario of accelerated international trade integration, with a higher degree of trade openness. We found that long run structural change widens income inequality in all six developing countries. Accelerated trade integration amplifies the effect further, but most of it is already generated in the baseline scenario. A decrease in the relative value of land property and an increase in the relative value of capital ownership appear as key determinants. We decompose income differentials in three dimensions. Structural change worsens the income gap between male and female headed households, but the additional impact of trade is minimal. The effect of structural change is not uniform across countries when income of rural households is contrasted with the one of urban households, yet more trade reduces the relative rural income. Relative poverty increases in both the baseline and the larger trade volume case. However, we found that absolute poverty would be eradicated in almost all countries by the year 2050.

Keywords: Shared socioeconomic pathways, dynamic computable general equilibrium models, structural change, development scenarios, Albania, Bolivia, Ethiopia, Malawi, Nicaragua, Vietnam, income inequality, microsimulation, poverty.

JEL Classification: C68, E17, F17, I32, O11, O15, O41

Suggested Citation

Britz, Wolfgang and Jafari, Yaghoob and Nekhay, Olexandr and Roson, Roberto, Modeling Trade and Income Distribution in Six Developing Countries: A Dynamic General Equilibrium Analysis up to the Year 2050 (April 10, 2020). University Ca' Foscari of Venice, Dept. of Economics Research Paper Series No. 03/2020, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3576449

Wolfgang Britz

University of Bonn ( email )

Nussallee 21, Haus 1, Raum 14
Postfach 2220
53113 Bonn
Germany
++ 49 - 2 28 - 73 29 12 (Phone)
++ 49 - 2 28 - 73 46 93 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.ilr.uni-bonn.de/em/staff/britz/britz_e.htm

Yaghoob Jafari

University of Bonn ( email )

Regina-Pacis-Weg 3
Postfach 2220
Bonn, D-53012
Germany

Olexandr Nekhay

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Roberto Roson (Contact Author)

Ca Foscari University of Venice - Dipartimento di Economia ( email )

Cannaregio 873
Venice, 30121
Italy
+39 041 2349147 (Phone)
+39 041 2349176 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://venus.unive.it/roson

Bocconi University - IEFE Centre for Research on Energy and Environmental Economics and Policy ( email )

viale Filippetti, 9
Milan, 20122
Italy

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
91
Abstract Views
781
Rank
736,406
PlumX Metrics