Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach

The purpose of this study is to quantify the impact of Russia’s embargo on the economies of most affected EU countries. Russia is the fourth largest trading partner and the second largest importer of Europe’s agriculture products. According to the Eurostat, Russia’s food import counts approximately...

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Autor principal: Mo, Yunle
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Economics 2016
Materias:
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author Mo, Yunle
author_browse Mo, Yunle
author_facet Mo, Yunle
author_sort Mo, Yunle
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The purpose of this study is to quantify the impact of Russia’s embargo on the economies of most affected EU countries. Russia is the fourth largest trading partner and the second largest importer of Europe’s agriculture products. According to the Eurostat, Russia’s food import counts approximately 10% of Europe’s total export of agriculture and food products. In June 2014, the European Union (EU) adopted a series of economic sanctions against Russia due to the Ukraine’s territorial crisis. As retaliation, Russia imposed a one-year food embargo on the import of a whole range of food products from the EU, Norway, Australia, Canada and the USA on 7 August 2014. In June 2015 the ban was extended to be effective until August 5, 2016, and it may be subsequently extended for another 1-year period. The most affected European countries are: the Baltic States, Finland, Poland, and Germany (as shown in the database of GTAP 2011). The impact of Russia’s counter-sanction on the economy of the EU countries is assessed in this study by conducting Input-Output multiplier analysis together with comparison studies. In order to allow a holistic view of the impact on the interested regions, the disaggregated Input-Output matrix for those four European countries of interest is constructed from the dataset of the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) in 2011. The results show that the impact on the whole economy of these four countries is moderate in terms of their change in GDP, but it does have significant negative impacts on certain industries of each economy, for instance, bovine meat industry in Germany, vegetables and fruits in both Baltic States and Poland, and dairy products in Finland. These impacts on production level may further forward its negative effects to the related labors and firms who run the risk of losing their income due to the embargo.
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spelling RepoSLU90032016-08-08T14:30:41Z Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach Mo, Yunle Russian embargo GTAP model an input-output multiplier analysis direct and indirect effects economic impact analysis The purpose of this study is to quantify the impact of Russia’s embargo on the economies of most affected EU countries. Russia is the fourth largest trading partner and the second largest importer of Europe’s agriculture products. According to the Eurostat, Russia’s food import counts approximately 10% of Europe’s total export of agriculture and food products. In June 2014, the European Union (EU) adopted a series of economic sanctions against Russia due to the Ukraine’s territorial crisis. As retaliation, Russia imposed a one-year food embargo on the import of a whole range of food products from the EU, Norway, Australia, Canada and the USA on 7 August 2014. In June 2015 the ban was extended to be effective until August 5, 2016, and it may be subsequently extended for another 1-year period. The most affected European countries are: the Baltic States, Finland, Poland, and Germany (as shown in the database of GTAP 2011). The impact of Russia’s counter-sanction on the economy of the EU countries is assessed in this study by conducting Input-Output multiplier analysis together with comparison studies. In order to allow a holistic view of the impact on the interested regions, the disaggregated Input-Output matrix for those four European countries of interest is constructed from the dataset of the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) in 2011. The results show that the impact on the whole economy of these four countries is moderate in terms of their change in GDP, but it does have significant negative impacts on certain industries of each economy, for instance, bovine meat industry in Germany, vegetables and fruits in both Baltic States and Poland, and dairy products in Finland. These impacts on production level may further forward its negative effects to the related labors and firms who run the risk of losing their income due to the embargo. SLU/Dept. of Economics 2016 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9003/
spellingShingle Russian embargo
GTAP model
an input-output multiplier analysis
direct and indirect effects
economic impact analysis
Mo, Yunle
Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach
title Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach
title_full Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach
title_fullStr Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach
title_short Assessment of Russian embargo impact on economies of the EU countries : an input-output approach
title_sort assessment of russian embargo impact on economies of the eu countries : an input-output approach
topic Russian embargo
GTAP model
an input-output multiplier analysis
direct and indirect effects
economic impact analysis