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Aggregated Agricultural Statistics: problems of modelling with real data

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Title: Aggregated Agricultural Statistics: problems of modelling with real data


1
Aggregated Agricultural Statistics problems of
modelling with real data
  • Ignacio Pérez, University Bonn

2
Table of Contents
  • Introduction a modelling approach
  • Statistical Sources
  • The Problem
  • The CoCo Solution
  • Data flows in the CAPRI Model
  • Conclusions

3
Introduction a modelling approach
  • The CAPRI Modelling was born as an initiative to
    simulate economic effects of policy changes in
    the European agricultural sector
  • It was and is still maintained by a coordinating
    team (IAP, University of Bonn) and a network of
    partners
  • It is a mathematical equilibrium model,
    comparative-static, spatial and includes
    endogenous price feedback
  • Its main parts are a supply, a market and a young
    animal trade modules
  • And needs to be fed with data

4
Statistical Sources
  • Initially, the CAPRI data base built upon three
    major data sources
  • The SPEL-EU data base from EUROSTAT
  • consistent national frame for farm and market
    balances, activity levels (hectares of crops and
    animal herd sizes)
  • unit value prices
  • Economic Accounts for Agriculture.
  • The REGIO domain of EUROSTAT main source for
    regional activity levels and physical outputs
  • Additional data supplied by
  • national experts of the project (to fill gaps or
    correct errors in REGIO and to supply data not
    comprised in it)
  • other institutions (FAOSTAT, EU, ), mainly data
    on policy instruments

5
The Problem
  • But as the SPEL-EU data base was growing over the
    years, more or more rules to create the best
    possible corrections and estimates for missing
    values were introduced.
  • Users could not determine which data were
    original, trend estimates, calculated ones, etc
  • Moreover, EUROSTAT kept introducing updates in
    its time series.
  • And in 1999 decided to stop the SPEL exercise and
    initiate a new project called AGRIS (Agricultural
    Information System).
  • so we decided to go for an own solution and
    create the CoCo Data Base

6
The CoCo Solution
  • CoCo stands for completeness and consistency
  • The basic idea was
  • To reproduce the accounting principles underlying
    the consistency framework of SPEL (wherever
    appropriate)
  • To use GAMS, common programming language in CAPRI
    (and many other models)
  • To storage meta-information (data points from
    statistics or trend estimates)
  • To find a solution less dependant on threshold
    values and individual decisions about functional
    forms and corrections (reduction of update costs)

7
The CoCo Solution
  • General approach minimising normalised least
    squares under constraints
  • (differences between corrected and given data
    and differences between trend forecasts and
    given or fitted data)

8
The CoCo Solution
  • Definition of upper and lower bounds (estimation
    corridor)

9
The CoCo Solution
  • Data estimation hanging on bounds
    (infeasibilities)

10
The CoCo Solution
  • Data estimation reaching the optimum (relaxing of
    bounds)

11
Data Flows in CAPRI
12
Conclusions
  • CoCo is actually digested by the CAPRI Model
    without major necessary updates.
  • The estimation process ensures that
    infeasibilities are avoided in most instances,
    thus reducing the control cost for a new data
    update.
  • The risk that original data are corrected with
    inconsistencies is close to zero.
  • The sweeping tail problem of trend estimates is
    up to a certain extent reduced by introducing
    bounds.
  • and in any case original data are kept in the
    system for comparison purposes (transparent
    incremental procedure)

13
Thanks for your attention !!!
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