eprintid: 1839 rev_number: 8 eprint_status: archive userid: 1 dir: disk0/00/00/18/39 datestamp: 2002-01-15 00:00:00 lastmod: 2014-04-03 11:27:40 status_changed: 2012-08-14 15:02:58 type: doctoralThesis metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Koschel, Henrike title: A CGE Analysis of the Employment Double Dividend-Hypothesis : Substitution Patterns in Production, Foreign Trade, and Labour Market Imperfections title_de: Analyse der Beschäftigungseffekte einer ökologischen Steuerreform im Rahmen eines CGE-Modells : Substitutionselastizitäten, Außenhandel und unvollkommene Arbeitsmärkte ispublished: pub subjects: 330 divisions: 181000 adv_faculty: af-18 keywords: CGE-Analysis cterms_swd: Allgemeines Gleichgewichtsmodell cterms_swd: Ökologische Steuerreform cterms_swd: Steuerüberwälzung cterms_swd: Arbeitsmarkttheorie cterms_swd: Faktorsubstitution abstract_translated_text: This thesis deals with the employment double dividend (EDD) hypothesis which claims that an ecological tax reform leads to both a reduction in the unemployment rate and to lower pollution. It assesses the employment effects of ecological tax reforms in a computable general equilibrium (CGE) model framework for 14 countries of the European Union. The literature survey points to three main determinants for the EDD outcome in empirical models: the substitution elasticities in production, the foreign trade, and the labour market specification. Next, the influence of substitution patterns in production on the EDD outcome is tested. Econometric estimates of substitution elasticities for German production and service sectors are rarely available in the literature. Therefore, sectorally disaggregated substitution elasticities between capital, labour, material, electricity, and fossil fuels are estimated using a non-nested and a nested translog cost function. Sensitivity analyses with respect to substitution elasticities show that the CGE model produces an EDD for all parameter choices considered. This is mainly due to tax shifting processes towards capital income and the foreign sector. Then, Armington elasticities of substitution in the rest of the world?s import demand function as well as price elasticities of the rest of the world?s export supply function are modified in order to test the CGE model?s sensitivity with respect to terms-of-trade effects. The result is that employment effects of an EU-wide ecological tax reform are positive in all cases. Finally, the assumption of the neoclassical labour market is replaced by the assumption of an imperfect labour market with involuntary unemployment. First, exogenous real wage rigidities are assumed; then, a monopoly union model with different ways of unemployment benefits indexation is introduced. The simulation results confirm that labour market imperfections may enhance the chance for an EDD. abstract_translated_lang: eng class_scheme: thes_soz date: 2001 date_type: published id_scheme: DOI id_number: 10.11588/heidok.00001839 ppn_swb: 1643261738 own_urn: urn:nbn:de:bsz:16-opus-18390 date_accepted: 2001-12-04 advisor: HASH(0x5561209735d0) language: eng bibsort: KOSCHELHENACGEANALYS2001 full_text_status: public citation: Koschel, Henrike (2001) A CGE Analysis of the Employment Double Dividend-Hypothesis : Substitution Patterns in Production, Foreign Trade, and Labour Market Imperfections. [Dissertation] document_url: https://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/volltextserver/1839/1/koschel-diss.pdf