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Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel
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Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System

(C&W Chapter 5, 6)

R. Jongeneel

Page 2: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Lecture Plan World price system analysis

inputs/outputs (tradable/non-tradable)labourlandcapital (discount rate)

domestic price system analysisshadow exchange ratetraded/non-traded goodslabour(land, discount rate)

Page 3: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

World Prize System-Analysis Main objectives:

efficient utilization & existing resources

growth of resources

improving distribution (equity)

Trade-offs

short-run optimization

long-run optimization

Page 4: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

World Price System-Analysis Main focus: efficiency analysis focus on

efficient resource utilization

Opportunity costs: defined in terms of

benefits foregone from the use of existing

resources in one project rather than in their

most likely alternative use

Page 5: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

World Price System-Analysis

World price numeraire choice

Focus is on projects that produce traded

goods and whose main benefits are in

foreign exchange (trade efficiency)

Page 6: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Assessing Costs and Benefitstradable Non-tradable

outputs

Project

inputs

tradable Non-tradable

labour land capital

Page 7: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Traded and non-traded goods

Tradables project affects country’s balance

of payments

classification depends on government’s

trade policy

non-tradables goods may be non-traded for

various reasons

Page 8: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Valuation of traded goods

Border parity pricing: use border prices and

add domestic margins (transport,

distribution) to obtain border prices at

project level

export output: fob price - value T + D

import input: cif price + value T + D

Page 9: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Value of traded goods

T 1+D 1

Project size Production centre

domestic proj. inputs

Border

Port

T2+D2

T4+D4

T5+D5T3+D3

Cons. Centre

project outputs

Page 10: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Value of traded goods

Price: convert world prices into local currency

at official exchange rate

Shadow price:

SPi = (Wpi x OER) + (Ti CFT + Di CFD)

CFi = SPi / DPi

Page 11: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Valuation of non-traded goods

Non-traded goods

Variable supply

increase supply

(price )

Fixed supply

Replacement, subst.

price

Page 12: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Non-traded inputs: variable supply

Shadow price: long-run marginal costs of additional supply (in world price equivalents)

traded non-traded labor

input input

i n l

LLLjnnjniiijj CFWaCFPaCFPaSP ......

Page 13: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Example: non-traded electricity production

Cost at domestic price R3/kWH

CF

Cost at shadow price Rs/kWH

Operating costs Fuel Local materials

30.00 60.00

0.961 0.670

28.83 40.20

Labour: skilled Labour: unskilled

80.00 60.00

0.900 0.500

72.00

5.00 Capital: equipm. Capital: buildings

60.00 60.00

0.950 0.737

57.00 44.22

300.00

247.25

CF electricity = 247.25 = 0.824 300

Page 14: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Non-traded inputs: fixed supply Use average conversion factor for the

whole economy since more detailed info is absent

ACF = M + X _

(M+TM-SM)+(X+TX+SX)

Limitations: “average” instead of “marginal”, relies only on traded goods, omits effect of trade controlls (quota)

Page 15: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Labour valuation

Possible distinctionsskilled vs. unskilledworkers in excess supply vs. workers

in excess demand

Problem: ill-functioning labour market, immobility of labour

Page 16: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Labour: workers in excess supply

Opportunity costs: value of the output produced in the alternative occupation (which may offer only part-time work or underemployment)

wagemarket

SWR

MWR

SWRCF

CFmaSWR

L

iii

..

Page 17: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Labour: workers in excess demand

Two options: 1: attract labour from other activities2: increase labour supply by training or immigration

Option 1:

Option 2:

i

ii ACFmaMWR

(1 )foreign F FSWR rMWR r MWR CCF

Page 18: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Land

Comp. Land market price: equal to the expected future gain from the land purchased / rented

problem: land market subject to regulation / speculation

Page 19: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Example: land valuation cotton/sugarcane

Domestic marketprices Rs/acre

CF World pricesRs/acre

Cotton outputFamily labourFertilizerPesticidesBullocksWaterNet return

56.020.05.55.5

11.05.58.5

1.251.250.950.950.800.80

70.025.05.25.08.84.4

21.6

Page 20: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Capital: discount rate

Where do funds come from...?

Determines relevant opportunity costs

Opportunity costs (examples) return on the marginal project return obtained in the private sector weighted average of discount rates (real)

in domestic and foreign markets

Page 21: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Capital: discount rate

r = q . CFq

or

r = a1i1+a2i2

Page 22: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Domestic price system-analysis

Choice of price unit in itself does not determine the opportunity cost of an item

Using DPS does not mean that domestic prices determine opportunity costs of (non-traded) goods

The difference between WPS and DPS arises because in general Pwm and Pdom differ by more that the margin for T+D-costs

Page 23: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Shadow exchange rate

If domestic prices are the numeraire allowance must be made for any general divergence between domestic and world prices in the economy

Solution: use shadow exchange rate

Page 24: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Shadow Exchange Rate

1

( ) ( )

( )

F

M M X X

SERCF

ACF OER

M T S X S TSER

OER M X

Page 25: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Shadow Exchange Rate

A more perfect approach is:

j j

jj

i i

ii WP

DPa

WP

DPa

OER

SER

Page 26: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Example: Shadow Exchange Rate

Commodities $ value Weights Domestic price Rs

World price Rs

Price ratio

Rice Wheat Machines SER/OER

20 16 14

0.33 0.12 0.55

1100 1440 2000

1000 1200 1500

weighted average

1.10 1.20 1.33 1.24

OER = Rs10/US$

Page 27: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Approximations in DPS-Analysis

Classificationforeign exchange (F)domestic resources (N)unskilled labour (LU)skilled labour (LS)transfer payments (T)

(F): traded goods valued at Pwm (OER)

(N): non-traded goods valued at Pdm

Page 28: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

NPV and DPS-analysis

At project level NPV=F+N+LU+LS+T

At national economic level ENPV=F.CFF+N.CFN+LU.CFLU+LS.CFLS

More detail: further decompose N

Page 29: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Traded goods: valuation at DPS

Derive CF (conversion factors)

DPSPi=(WPi.OER).CFF+(Ti.DPCFT+Di.DPCFD)

but CFF=SER/OER

thus DPSPi=(WPi.SER)+(Ti.DPCFT+Di.DPCFD)

Page 30: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Non-traded goods in DPS

Principle: value inputs in variable supply at long-run MC

j

jj

i n LLLLjnnnjiiijj

DP

DPSPDPCF

and

DPCFWaDPCFPaDPCFPaDPSP

...

Page 31: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Labour valuation at DPS

Labour: shadow wage is based on output foregone

Unskilled:

Skilled:

i

iii DPCFMaDPSWR ..

FFFF

FFFF

MWRrCFMWRrDPSWR

or

CFCCFMWRrrMWRDPSWR

).1()..(

..)1(

Page 32: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Comparing DPS with WPS

Identical decisions are made in both systems

NPVDP>0 when NPVWP>0

and

NPVDP = NPVWP x CFF

with CFF = SER / OER

Page 33: Economic Analysis under World and Domestic Price System (C&W Chapter 5, 6) R. Jongeneel.

Comparing DPS and WPS analysis

Discount

rate

NPV DP System

analysis

WP System

nnalysis