Benjamin Hunt’s scientific contributions

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Publications (2)


Figure 4: 10-percentage-point increase in U.S. and China bilateral import tariffs: impact on production factors in GIMF
Figure 5: 10-percentage-point increase in U.S. and China bilateral import tariffs: exports in GIMF
Figure 8: 10-percentage-point increase in U.S. and China bilateral import tariffs: terms of trade
Figure 9: 10-percentage-point increase in U.S. and China bilateral import tariffs: Changes in bilateral exports in GTAP
Figure 11: Sectoral production schemes in GTAP sector j output Leontieff

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Modeling Trade Tensions: Different Mechanisms in General Equilibrium
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2020

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56 Reads

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4 Citations

IMF Working Paper

Benjamin Hunt

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Susanna Mursula

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Marika Santoro

In this paper, we investigate the mechanisms through which import tariffs impact the macroeconomy in two large scale workhorse models used for quantitative policy analysis: a computational general equilibrium (CGE) model (Purdue University GTAP model) and a multi-country dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model (IMF GIMF model). The quantitative effects of an increase in tariffs reflect different mechanisms at work. Like other models in the trade literature, in GTAP higher tariffs generate a loss in terms of output arising from an inefficient reallocation of resources between sectors. In GIMF instead, as in other DSGE models, tariffs act as a disincentive to factor utilization. We show that the two models/channels can be broadly interpreted as capturing the impact of tariffs on different components of a country’s aggregate production function: aggregate productivity (GTAP) and factor supply/utilization (GIMF). We discuss ways to combine the estimates from these two models to provide a more complete assessment of the macro effects of tariffs.

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Citations (2)


... Despite their appeal, static MCMS models lack a deeper understanding of the dynamic effects of TFS and how they affect variables, including inflation, that are of interest to central banks. As a result, other studies(Hunt et al., 2020;Ahn et al., 2023) have employed dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models for the analysis of TFS, thus illustrating the usefulness of a comprehensive modelling toolkit. model featuring trade barriers) (see Box 2 for a more extensive discussion). ...

Reference:

Navigating a fragmenting global trading system: insights for central banks
Modeling Trade Tensions: Different Mechanisms in General Equilibrium
  • Citing Article
  • January 2020

SSRN Electronic Journal

... However, this reliance exposed the economy to risks associated with fluctuating Chinese demand [42]. Similarly, South Africa faced declining demand for its mineral exports due to slower global growth, highlighting the vulnerabilities of resource-dependent economies [43]. Table 3 summarizes the key policy responses and economic adjustments made by Europe and emerging markets during the trade war. ...

Modeling Trade Tensions: Different Mechanisms in General Equilibrium

IMF Working Paper