Estimating Household Responses to Trade Reforms : Net Consumers and Net Producers in Rural Mexico

This paper explores an empirical methodology to assess the impacts of trade reforms on household behavior in developing countries. It focuses on consumption and income responses: when price reforms take place, households modify consumption and production decisions and local labor markets adjust. The paper proposes a joint estimator of demand and wage price elasticities from survey data. The method uses an empirical model of demand to extract price information from unit values, and uses this information to estimate the response of households to price reforms. By correcting unit values for quality effects and measurement error, the method overcomes the problem of the endogeneity of unit values. By endogeneizing household income, the model corrects potential biases in the estimation of own- and cross-price elasticities in consumption. The paper applies the method to an expenditure and income survey for rural Mexico. It shows that the corrections suggested in this paper are empirically important. In particular, it shows that allowing for consumption and income responses is a key element of an accurate empirical assessment of trade policy.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Porto, Guido G.
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-09
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL PRICES, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AGRICULTURE, AVERAGE SHARE, CONSTANT PRICES, CONSUMER PRICES, CONSUMERS, CORN PRICES, DEMAND FUNCTIONS, DEMAND SIDE, DEMOGRAPHICS, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, ECONOMETRIC MODEL, ELASTICITY, EMPIRICAL APPLICATION, EMPIRICAL ESTIMATION, EMPIRICAL MODEL, EMPIRICAL MODELS, EMPIRICAL RESULTS, EMPLOYMENT, ENDOGENOUS DETERMINATION, EQUATIONS, EQUILIBRIUM, ESTIMATION, EXPENDITURES, EXPLANATORY VARIABLES, EXPORTS, FACTOR PRICES, FARMS, FUTURE RESEARCH, GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM MODEL, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS, HOUSEHOLD SIZE, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, INCOME, INCOME EFFECT, INCOME EFFECTS, INCOME ELASTICITY, INCOME EQUATION, INCOME SUPPORT, INCOMES, INTERNATIONAL MARKETS, LABOR DEMAND, LABOR DEMAND FUNCTIONS, LABOR INPUTS, LABOR MARKET, LABOR MARKETS, MARGINAL PRODUCT, MARKET ACCESS, MARKET PRICES, MEASUREMENT ERROR, MEASUREMENT ERRORS, MODEL, NATIONAL SURVEYS, NOMINAL INCOME, NORMAL GOOD, POLICY RESEARCH, POOR COUNTRIES, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, POVERTY DEBATE, PRICE CHANGES, PRICE DIFFERENCES, PRICE EFFECT, PRICE ELASTICITIES, PRICE ELASTICITY, PRICE INCREASES, PRODUCER PRICES, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, PRODUCTIVE ACTIVITY, PROFIT MAXIMIZATION, PROPORTIONAL CHANGE, REAL INCOME, REAL WAGES, REGIONAL DUMMIES, RELATIVE IMPORTANCE, RELATIVE PRICES, SALES, SUBSTITUTION, SUBSTITUTION EFFECT, SURPLUS, TARIFF BARRIERS, TAXATION, TRADE BARRIERS, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, TRADE REFORMS, TRANSACTION COSTS, UTILITY FUNCTION, UTILITY MAXIMIZATION, WAGES, WELFARE EFFECTS, WORLD MARKETS, WTO,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/09/6252145/estimating-household-responses-trade-reforms-net-consumers-net-producers-rural-mexico
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8596
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