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Construction of hybrid Input-Output tables for E3 CGE model calibration and consequences on energy policy analysis

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  • Combet, Emmanuel
  • Ghersi, Frédéric
  • Lefevre, Julien
  • Le Treut, Gaëlle

Abstract

“Hybrid” modelling approaches are increasingly used to bridge the historical gap between the bottom-up and top-down approaches to energy/economy/environment modelling. By nature, they require a substantial effort of harmonisation between national accounts and energy balance data. However, the methods applied for reconciling those data and their impacts on the empirical information used to calibrate CGE models are generally poorly documented, if at all, even for prominent models. Different hybridisation techniques have different impacts on key empirical features that are important for policy evaluation. After reviewing the literature on hybridisation methods, this paper proposes and details an innovative procedure for building hybrid Input-Output matrices at the country scale, and illustrates it with data for France. Compared to existing methods, this procedure includes information about energy flows, prices and quantities coming from energy statistics, without alteration, within a consistent social accounting framework. The impact of this method is illustrated in a small CGE model that does not incorporate the other modelling specificities of hybrid models. The welfare costs of a same price-induced energy policy are evaluated keeping the same behavioural structural assumptions and parameters, but with a calibration of the model on our hybrid matrices, or alternatively, on unmodified input-output data. This comparison shows the importance of describing with transparency the impacts of data hybridisation methods.

Suggested Citation

  • Combet, Emmanuel & Ghersi, Frédéric & Lefevre, Julien & Le Treut, Gaëlle, 2014. "Construction of hybrid Input-Output tables for E3 CGE model calibration and consequences on energy policy analysis," Conference papers 332478, Purdue University, Center for Global Trade Analysis, Global Trade Analysis Project.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:pugtwp:332478
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    File URL: https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/332478/files/6988.pdf
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jean Charles Hourcade & Mark Jaccard & Chris Bataille & Frédéric Ghersi, 2006. "Hybrid Modeling: New Answers to Old Challenges," Post-Print halshs-00471234, HAL.
    2. Jean-Charles Hourcade, Mark Jaccard, Chris Bataille, and Frederic Ghersi, 2006. "Hybrid Modeling: New Answers to Old Challenges Introduction to the Special Issue of The Energy Journal," The Energy Journal, International Association for Energy Economics, vol. 0(Special I), pages 1-12.
    3. Burniaux, Jean-Marc & Truong Truong, 2002. "GTAP-E: An Energy-Environmental Version of the GTAP Model," GTAP Technical Papers 923, Center for Global Trade Analysis, Department of Agricultural Economics, Purdue University.
    4. Burniaux, Jean-March & Truong, Truong P., 2002. "Gtap-E: An Energy-Environmental Version Of The Gtap Model," Technical Papers 28705, Purdue University, Center for Global Trade Analysis, Global Trade Analysis Project.
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