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Part 1: Document Description
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Citation |
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Title: |
Macroeconomic model (GAMS) for poverty reduction in Mexico |
Identification Number: |
doi:10.60507/FK2/CNOY41 |
Distributor: |
bonndata |
Date of Distribution: |
2023-09-18 |
Version: |
1 |
Bibliographic Citation: |
José Luis Viveros Añorve, 2023, "Macroeconomic model (GAMS) for poverty reduction in Mexico", https://doi.org/10.60507/FK2/CNOY41, bonndata, V1 |
Citation |
|
Title: |
Macroeconomic model (GAMS) for poverty reduction in Mexico |
Identification Number: |
doi:10.60507/FK2/CNOY41 |
Identification Number: |
108e6046-b7bd-4ef0-8f93-852eb27a12bf |
Authoring Entity: |
José Luis Viveros Añorve (Center for Development Research, Department Economy and Technological Change (ZEF B), University of Bonn) |
Distributor: |
bonndata |
Access Authority: |
José Luis Viveros Añorve |
Holdings Information: |
https://doi.org/10.60507/FK2/CNOY41 |
Study Scope |
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Keywords: |
Other |
Topic Classification: |
poverty, economic development, development planning, macroeconomics |
Abstract: |
A Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model in a bottom-up approach - based on microfoundations - and a Social Accounting Matrix (SAM) for the regional economy of Chiapas are built. Methodology: This research applies a Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model. It is a system of equations that describes an entire economy and all the interactions between productive sectors, commodity and factor markets, and institutions. All of the equations are solved simultaneously to find an economy-wide equilibrium in which demand and supply quantities are equal in every market at a certain level of prices (Burfisher, 2011). Two of the features of this model are that, on one hand, it implements a “bottom-up” approach, that is, it is focused on individual markets and economic agents. On the other hand, it is partially synthetic. In other words, most parameters can be calibrated with data from the SAM. Data framework: A Social Accounting Matrix (SAM) is a balanced square matrix that represents all income and expenditure flows between productive sectors, markets, and economic agents of an economy at a given period of time (Müller, Perez & Hubertus, 2009). It is based on the double entry bookkeeping in accounting, which requires that total revenue equals total expenditure in each single account included in the SAM (Breisinger, Thomas & Thurlow, 2010). The main features of the Chiapas SAM are that production activities are broken down in 10 sectors, according to the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). There is one commodity per economic activity. Factors of production are disaggregated into formal and informal labor, and capital. Direct taxes are broken up into activity tax, social security contributions, household and corporate income taxes, ‘tenencia’ tax (ownership tax, i.e. a tax associated with the possession or use of vehicles), and regional payroll tax (‘nomina’). Indirect taxes, in turn, are value-added, sales and export taxes, and import tariffs. Subsidies on production by economic activity are also included. Households are disaggregated by income quintiles. Social transfers are split in non-conditional (Procampo, universal pension, PAL-Sin Hambre , temporary employment program, and the regional program Amanecer ) and Oportunidades. The latter is also broken down into its five components: food, elderly, education, child, and energy. The introduction of conditional cash transfers in the SAM is particularly relevant because it allows assessing the impact of changes in their amount and distribution on household income, poverty reduction, income inequality, and economic growth at the regional level. Data sources: - National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI): 2012 National Employment and Occupation Survey 2013 Chiapas Statistical Yearbook 2012 National Household Income-Expenditure Survey 2012 Chiapas Statistical Perspective 2003-2012 Goods and Services Accounts (SCNM) 2003-2012 Institutional Sector Accounts (SCNM) 2008 Input-Output Table 2008 Supply and Use Tables - Chiapas State Committee of Statistical and Geographical Information (CEIEG): 2012 Chiapas Employment and Occupation Survey 2012 Chiapas Monthly Statistical Reports of IMSS-insured Workers - Federal Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare (STYPS): 2012 IMSS-registered Daily Salary by Economic Activity 2012 IMSS-insured Workers Quality/Lineage: With the raw data a Social Accounting Matrix for the regional economy of Chiapas was built Features: - Oportunidades broken down by component - Other non-conditional social transfers such as Procampo, PAL-Sin Hambre, Employment program, Universal pension, and the regional program 'Amanecer' - Informal wages - Satellites tables of formal and informal employment - Productive activities according to the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) used in Mexico, Canada, and the United States of America - 10 economic activities - 10 Commodities (one per economic activity) - Factors of production: formal and informal labor and capital Purpose: 1. To assess the opportunity cost of financing "Oportunidades", Mexico's conditional cash transfers program, and its implications for rural development and rural economic growth in the regional setting of Chiapas. Moreover, 2. Pro-growth and pro-poor tax structures are also evaluated by applying standard economic analysis tools and modeling to substantially raise the federal non-oil tax revenue to finance social policy for poverty and inequality reduction. Dissertation: Viveros Añorve, J. L. (2015): The opportunity cost of financing "Oportunidades": a general equilibrium assessment for poverty reduction in Mexico. Ph.D. dissertation. Center for Development Research, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Bonn |
Time Period: |
2012-01-01-2012-12-31 |
Country: |
Mexico |
Geographic Coverage: |
Chiapas |
Geographic Bounding Box: |
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Notes: |
This dataset was first published on the institutional Repository "Zentrum für Entwicklungsforschung: ZEF Data Portal" with ID={108e6046-b7bd-4ef0-8f93-852eb27a12bf}.<br/> Sets in SAM A_AGRC Agriculture A_MING Mining A_UTIL Utilities A_CNST Construction A_MANU Manufacturing A_TRDE Trade and transport A_OSER Other services A_EDUS Education services A_HEAS Health services A_PADM Public administration C_AGRC Output of Agriculture C_MING Output of Mining C_UTIL Output of Utilities C_CNST Output of Construction C_MANU Output of Manufacturing C_TRDE Output of Trade and transport C_OSER Output of Other services C_EDUS Output of Education services C_HEAS Output of Health services C_PADM Output of Public administration TC_DOME Transaction cost domestic TC_IMPT Transaction cost imports TC_EXPT Transaction cost exports F_FLAB Formal wages F_ILAB Informal wages F_CAPR Operating surplus T_LBTX Labor tax T_PYTX Payroll tax (regional) T_CPTX Activity tax T_VATX Value-added tax T_SLTX Sales tax T_IMTX Import tariffs T_EXTX Export tax T_AMTX Tenencia tax T_INTX Income tax T_CITX Corporate income tax T_SBPD Subsidies on production I_HHD1 Household quintile 1 I_HHD2 Household quintile 2 I_HHD3 Household quintile 3 I_HHD4 Household quintile 4 I_HHD5 Household quintile 5 I_FRMS Enterprises I_GOVT Government I_AMAN Amanecer program I_FOOD Oportunidades food component I_ELDY Oportunidades elderly component I_EDUC Oportunidades education component I_CHLD Oportunidades child component I_ENGY Oportunidades energy component I_PROC Procampo program I_UNPE Universal pension I_PALS Food program Sin-Hambre I_PEMT Employment program I_SIAC Savings-Investment account I_STCK Stock changes I_ROWD Rest of the world (rest of Mexico+Rest of world) I_TOTL Total |
Methodology and Processing |
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Sources Statement |
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Data Access |
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Other Study Description Materials |
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CGE.zip |
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application/zip |
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CGE_flows.png |
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image/png |
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metadata.xml |
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text/xml |
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ReadMe_Sets_in_SAM.txt |
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text/plain |
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SAM12-05.csv |
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text/csv |