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= IFs Issues and Modules: Quick Survey = | |||
The '''population''' module: | |||
*represents 22 age-sex cohorts to age 100+ | |||
*calculates change in fertility and mortality rates in response to income, income distribution, and analysis multipliers | |||
*computes average life expectancy at birth, literacy rate, and overall measures of human development (HDI) and physical quality of life | |||
*represents migration and HIV/AIDS | |||
*includes a newly developing submodel of formal education across primary, secondary, and tertiary levels | |||
The '''economic''' module: | |||
*represents the economy in six sectors: agriculture, materials, energy, industry, services, and ICT (other sectors could be configured, using raw data from the GTAP project) | |||
*computes and uses input-output matrices that change dynamically with development level | |||
*is a general equilibrium-seeking model that does not assume exact equilibrium will exist in any given year; rather it uses inventories as buffer stocks and to provide price signals so that the model chases equilibrium over time | |||
*contains an endogenous production function that represents contributions to growth in multifactor productivity from R&D, education, worker health, economic policies ("freedom"), and energy prices (the "quality" of capital) | |||
*uses a Linear Expenditure System to represent changing consumption patterns | |||
*utilizes a "pooled" rather than the bilateral trade approach for international trade | |||
*is being imbedded during 2002 in a social accounting matrix (SAM) envelope that will tie economic production and consumption to intra-actor financial flows | |||
The '''agricultural''' module: | |||
*represents production, consumption and trade of crops and meat; it also carries ocean fish catch and aquaculture in less detail | |||
*maintains land use in crop, grazing, forest, urban, and "other" categories | |||
*represents demand for food, for livestock feed, and for industrial use of agricultural products | |||
*is a partial equilibrium model in which food stocks buffer imbalances between production and consumption and determine price changes | |||
*overrides the agricultural sector in the economic module unless the user chooses otherwise | |||
The '''energy''' module: | |||
*portrays production of six energy types: oil, gas, coal, nuclear, hydroelectric, and other renewable | |||
*represents consumption and trade of energy in the aggregate | |||
*represents known reserves and ultimate resources of the fossil fuels | |||
*portrays changing capital costs of each energy type with technological change as well as with draw-downs of resources | |||
*is a partial equilibrium model in which energy stocks buffer imbalances between production and consumption and determine price changes | |||
*overrides the energy sector in the economic module unless the user chooses otherwise | |||
The two '''socio-political''' sub-modules: | |||
Within countries or geographic groupings | |||
*represents fiscal policy through taxing and spending decisions | |||
*shows six categories of government spending: military, health, education, R&D, foreign aid, and a residual category | |||
*represents changes in social conditions of individuals (like fertility rates or literacy levels), attitudes of individuals (such as the level of materialism/postmaterialism of a society from the World Value Survey), and the social organization of people (such as the status of women) | |||
*represents the evolution of democracy | |||
*represents the prospects for state instability or failure | |||
Between countries or groupings of countries | |||
*traces changes in power balances across states and regions | |||
*allows exploration of changes in the level of interstate threat | |||
*represents possible action-reaction processes and arms races with associated potential for conflict among countries | |||
The implicit '''environmental''' module: | |||
*is distributed throughout the overall model | |||
*allows tracking of remaining resources of fossil fuels, of the area of forested land, of water usage, and of atmospheric carbon dioxide emissions | |||
The implicit '''technology''' module: | |||
*is distributed throughout the overall model | |||
*allows changes in assumptions about rates of technological advance in agriculture, energy, and the broader economy | |||
*explicitly represents the extent of electronic networking of individuals in societies | |||
*is tied to the governmental spending model with respect to R&D spending = |
Revision as of 15:29, 22 June 2017
IFs Issues and Modules: Quick Survey
The population module:
- represents 22 age-sex cohorts to age 100+
- calculates change in fertility and mortality rates in response to income, income distribution, and analysis multipliers
- computes average life expectancy at birth, literacy rate, and overall measures of human development (HDI) and physical quality of life
- represents migration and HIV/AIDS
- includes a newly developing submodel of formal education across primary, secondary, and tertiary levels
The economic module:
- represents the economy in six sectors: agriculture, materials, energy, industry, services, and ICT (other sectors could be configured, using raw data from the GTAP project)
- computes and uses input-output matrices that change dynamically with development level
- is a general equilibrium-seeking model that does not assume exact equilibrium will exist in any given year; rather it uses inventories as buffer stocks and to provide price signals so that the model chases equilibrium over time
- contains an endogenous production function that represents contributions to growth in multifactor productivity from R&D, education, worker health, economic policies ("freedom"), and energy prices (the "quality" of capital)
- uses a Linear Expenditure System to represent changing consumption patterns
- utilizes a "pooled" rather than the bilateral trade approach for international trade
- is being imbedded during 2002 in a social accounting matrix (SAM) envelope that will tie economic production and consumption to intra-actor financial flows
The agricultural module:
- represents production, consumption and trade of crops and meat; it also carries ocean fish catch and aquaculture in less detail
- maintains land use in crop, grazing, forest, urban, and "other" categories
- represents demand for food, for livestock feed, and for industrial use of agricultural products
- is a partial equilibrium model in which food stocks buffer imbalances between production and consumption and determine price changes
- overrides the agricultural sector in the economic module unless the user chooses otherwise
The energy module:
- portrays production of six energy types: oil, gas, coal, nuclear, hydroelectric, and other renewable
- represents consumption and trade of energy in the aggregate
- represents known reserves and ultimate resources of the fossil fuels
- portrays changing capital costs of each energy type with technological change as well as with draw-downs of resources
- is a partial equilibrium model in which energy stocks buffer imbalances between production and consumption and determine price changes
- overrides the energy sector in the economic module unless the user chooses otherwise
The two socio-political sub-modules:
Within countries or geographic groupings
- represents fiscal policy through taxing and spending decisions
- shows six categories of government spending: military, health, education, R&D, foreign aid, and a residual category
- represents changes in social conditions of individuals (like fertility rates or literacy levels), attitudes of individuals (such as the level of materialism/postmaterialism of a society from the World Value Survey), and the social organization of people (such as the status of women)
- represents the evolution of democracy
- represents the prospects for state instability or failure
Between countries or groupings of countries
- traces changes in power balances across states and regions
- allows exploration of changes in the level of interstate threat
- represents possible action-reaction processes and arms races with associated potential for conflict among countries
The implicit environmental module:
- is distributed throughout the overall model
- allows tracking of remaining resources of fossil fuels, of the area of forested land, of water usage, and of atmospheric carbon dioxide emissions
The implicit technology module:
- is distributed throughout the overall model
- allows changes in assumptions about rates of technological advance in agriculture, energy, and the broader economy
- explicitly represents the extent of electronic networking of individuals in societies
- is tied to the governmental spending model with respect to R&D spending =