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162 CHAPTER 6


not consume. Apart from this, the payments to and from enterprises are modeled in the same way as the payments to and from households. The gov- ernment collects taxes and receives transfers from other institutions. In the current model, all taxes are at fixed ad valorem rates. Transfers from the rest of the world are exogenous in foreign currency, whereas transfers from domestic institutions are fixed shares of the net (posttax and savings) incomes of these institutions. The government uses this income to finance its own consumption, commodity and activity subsidies, and transfers to other insti- tutions. Government consumption is fixed in real (quantity) terms, whereas government transfers to domestic institutions (households and enterprises) are indexed to the consumer price index. Government savings (the difference between government income and spending) is a flexible residual. The final institution is the rest of the world.


Commodities pass through a chain, the first stage of which consists of the generation of aggregated domestic output from the output of different activities for a given commodity. These outputs are imperfectly fungible as a result of, for example, differences in timing, quality, and location among dif- ferent activities. A constant elasticity of substitution function is used as the aggregation function. The demand for the output of each activity is derived through the problem of minimizing the cost of supplying a given quantity of aggregated output, subject to this constant elasticity of substitution func- tion. Activity-specific commodity prices serve to clear the implicit market for each disaggregated commodity. At the next stage, aggregated domestic output is allocated between exports and domestic sales on the assumption that suppliers maximize sales revenue for any given aggregate output level, subject to imperfect transformability between exports and domestic sales, expressed by a constant elasticity of transformation function. On international markets, export demand is infinitely elastic at given world prices. The price received by domestic suppliers for exports is expressed in domestic currency (to the border) and export taxes (if any). The supply price for domestic sales is equal to the price paid because of domestic demand (from the supplier to satisfy demand) per unit of domestic sales. If the com- modity is not exported, total output is passed to the domestic market. Domestic demand is made up of the sum of the demand deriving from household consumption, government consumption, investment, and inter- mediate inputs. If the supply of a commodity destined for domestic use is made up of both imports and domestic output, all domestic market demand is a composite commodity made up of imports and domestic output, the demand for which is derived on the assumption that those who account for domestic demand minimize their costs, subject to imperfect substitutability. Total


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