经济危机与全球供应链

A. Bénassy-Quéré, Yvan Decreux, L. Fontagné, David Khoudour-Castéras
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引用次数: 46

摘要

2008年第四季度和2009年第一季度,世界贸易因经济危机而急剧下降,这引起了人们的广泛关注。对2009年全年的惊人预测已经公布,并给出了几种解释。特别是,除了信贷紧缩和全球需求下降之外,有人认为,由于全球化和供应链的碎片化,世界贸易将不可避免地超过世界GDP的冲击。我们使用简单的会计计算和多地区、多部门可计算一般均衡(CGE)模型的模拟来反驳这一观点,该模型明确地模拟了部门内部和部门之间的投入产出关系。利用CGE MIRAGE,我们提出了以下问题:最近对GDP变化的预测,加上需求构成的扭曲(对资本货物的损害)、贸易成本下降趋势的停止和油价的暴跌,是否能复制与目前所经历的世界贸易非常相似的乘数效应。首先,我们发现,当贸易流量受到世界GDP价格的影响时,在我们的计算中,2009年贸易下降的数量级为8.9%。然而,当贸易流量被该模型计算的特定部门的贸易价格压缩时,世界贸易的下降要有限得多(- 2.4%)。因此,该模型预测的贸易下降很大一部分来自相对价格效应。其次,尽管这一降幅仍高于IMF在2009年4月预测的全球GDP -1.3%的降幅,但当使用当前汇率(这是一种适当的参考)而不是购买力平价权重来汇总GDP时,即使这种放大效应也会消失。第三,虽然我们的论文不支持全球化和供应链碎片化导致的系统性贸易过度的假设,但信贷短缺等其他因素可能在短期内发挥了作用,以解释世界贸易的急剧下降。
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Economic Crisis and Global Supply Chains
Much attention has been paid to the sharp fall in world trade associated with the economic crisis during the last quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009. Alarming forecasts have been published for the whole year of 2009 and several explanations have been offered. In particular, beyond the credit crunch and the global drop in demand, it has been argued that, due to globalisation and the fragmentation of supply chains, world trade will inevitably overshoot the shock in world GDP. We contest this view using both simple accounting calculations and a simulation of the multi-region, multi-sector Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) model, which explicitly models input-output relations within and between sectors. Using the CGE MIRAGE, we ask whether the most recent forecasts of GDP change, together with a twist in the composition of demand (to the detriment of capital goods), a halt in the trend towards the reduction in trade costs and a collapse in the oil price can replicate a very similar multiplier effect on world trade to that currently being experienced. Firstly, we find that, when trade flows are deflated by the price of the world GDP, the order of magnitude for trade decline in 2009 is 8.9 percent in our exercise. However, when trade flows are deflated by the sector-specific trade prices computed by the model, the drop in world trade is much more limited (-2.4 percent). Hence a large part of the fall in trade predicted by the model comes from a relative price effect. Secondly, while this fall is still more than the –1.3% drop in world GDP forecast by the IMF in April 2009, even this magnification effect disappears when GDPs are aggregated using current exchange rates, which is the appropriate reference, rather than PPP weights. Thirdly, while, our paper does not support the hypothesis of a systematic over-shooting of trade due to globalisation and the fragmentation of supply chains, it seems likely that additional factors such as the credit shortage must have played a role in the short run to explain the sharp fall in world trade.
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