Research Paper2014

SubstitutionElasticities

How we estimated the hidden parameters that power climate policy models—and why the numbers matter more than you think.

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Abstract

Many of today's most pressing global challenges—from climate change to resource scarcity—require rigorous economic analysis. Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) models are the leading instruments for evaluating policy measures ex ante. Yet these sophisticated models depend critically on a set of parameters that, until now, have been estimated with surprising imprecision: substitution elasticities.

This paper provides a comprehensive, consistently estimated set of these parameters for 35 sectors using non-linear least squares and the World Input-Output Database (WIOD). Our findings reject both the "Cobb-Douglas simplification" and "Leontief rigidity" for most of the economy—revealing a nuanced landscape of partial substitutability with profound implications for policy design.

01

The Precision Imperative

In times of turbulent economic outlook and scarce financial resources, the margin for error in public spending and regulatory burden is vanishingly small. Policymakers need reliable instruments to assess the economic impact of environmental regulations before implementation—not after.

Computable General Equilibrium models have become the workhorse of climate policy evaluation. They simulate how millions of economic agents—firms, households, governments—react to policy shocks. But here's the critical point: the "behavior" of these agents is governed mathematically by elasticity parameters.

"If the elasticity of substitution is high, the economy can cheaply decarbonize by swapping dirty energy for clean capital. If it is low, decarbonization requires painful reductions in output. The difference between these two parameters is the difference between a policy that is economically viable and one that is politically ruinous."

Yet the current situation of elasticities is "rather unsatisfying"—a problem acknowledged since Mansur and Whalley's critique in 1984. Modellers frequently employ elasticities from unrelated sources, creating what we call a "Frankenstein" approach to parameterization. In extreme cases, when estimates are unavailable, researchers resort to what Dawkins et al. (2001) termed the "idiot's law of elasticities"—assuming unity (Cobb-Douglas) or using arbitrary "coffee table elasticities" chosen based on intuition rather than empirical rigor.

The Economic Machine

The elasticity of substitution is the central dial controlling how the economy responds to policy shocks.

KLEMσ=0σ=1σ→∞σ = 0.50YCapitalLabourEnergyMaterialsElasticity of Substitution
Leontief (σ=0)Cobb-Douglas (σ=1)
~ Partial substitutability
02

Theoretical Architecture

The question of how factors of production can be substituted originates in the fundamental work of Robert Solow (1956). He considered three cases: the "Harrod-Domar" case with zero elasticity (fixed proportions), the "Cobb-Douglas" case with unit elasticity, and a third, more general case with flexible elasticity.

Five years later, Arrow, Chenery, Minhas, and Solow (1961) formalized the general Constant Elasticity of Substitution (CES) production function—a generalization that nests both Leontief and Cobb-Douglas as special cases.

The CES Production Function

y = γ · (Σ αᵢ · xᵢ−ρ)−1/ρ
σElasticity
ρSubstitution param
γEfficiency
αDistribution

Where σ = 1/(1+ρ). If σ = 0 → Leontief (fixed proportions). If σ = 1 → Cobb-Douglas. If σ → ∞ → Perfect substitutes.

However, a basic CES framework assumes equal substitution elasticities between all inputs. To overcome this, Sato (1967) introduced nested CES functions—constructing separate CES functions for groups of inputs with similar substitutability, combined hierarchically.

The KLEM Nesting Structure

A three-level hierarchy governing how Capital, Labour, Energy, and Materials combine to produce output.

KLVAEEVAMYσ_KLσ_KLEσ_KLEM

Three-Level Nesting Structure

3Value Addedσ_KL
Capital (K)+Labour (L)

The substitution between machines and workers

2Extended Value Addedσ_KLE
VA (K,L)+Energy (E)

The energy intensity of value creation

1Gross Outputσ_KLEM
EVA (K,L,E)+Materials (M)

The material requirements of production

Interpretation

σ → 0: Fixed proportions (Leontief)

σ = 1: Constant factor shares (Cobb-Douglas)

σ → ∞: Perfect substitutes

03

Data & Estimation

We leverage the World Input-Output Database (WIOD)—covering 40 regions (85% of world GDP), 35 industries, and annual data from 1995 to 2009. For the first time, we can derive elasticities from the same data that researchers use to calibrate their simulations.

40
Regions
35
Industries
12
Years
85%
World GDP

The Battle of Algorithms

CES functions are non-linear in parameters. Most researchers linearize them via the Kmenta approximation (1967), but Kmenta himself noted problems when elasticities deviate from unity. The approximation works best when the world is Cobb-Douglas—creating circular logic.

Instead, we estimate directly from the non-linear form using five optimization algorithms: Levenberg-Marquardt, PORT routines, Differential Evolution, Nelder-Mead, and Simulated Annealing. This ensures we find the global minimum rather than getting stuck in local optima.

Linear vs. Non-Linear Estimation

The Kmenta approximation fails at the extremes—exactly where precision matters most.

Input Ratio (x₁/x₂)Output (y)Non-Linear (True)Kmenta Approx.σ = 0.50

Estimation Comparison

0.21.02.0
Max Error
0.330
Avg Error
0.080
Assessment

⚠ Significant bias at extreme elasticities

The Kmenta approximation creates a Taylor expansion around σ=1 (Cobb-Douglas). It fails when the true elasticity deviates significantly from unity.

04

Key Findings

RejectedThe Cobb-Douglas Assumption

For the overwhelming majority of 35 sectors, the hypothesis that σ = 1 is statistically rejected. The "idiot's law of elasticities" is empirically indefensible.

RejectedThe Leontief Assumption

Similarly, σ = 0 (fixed proportions) is rejected for most sectors. The economy does not operate with rigid input requirements.

ConfirmedTemporal Stability

No significant change in input substitutability occurs over the sample period. Elasticities can be treated as constant for medium-term policy modeling.

Sectoral Heterogeneity

The estimated elasticities reveal significant heterogeneity. Energy-intensive sectors (Basic Metals, Chemicals) show low elasticity between Capital-Labour and Energy—reflecting engineering constraints. Service sectors exhibit higher flexibility. The top nest (Materials) is often highly inelastic—you cannot substitute steel with labor to build a car.

Stability Over Time

Elasticities remain remarkably stable—technology changes productivity, not substitutability.

Temporal Stability Analysis

Comparing elasticities: 1995–1997 vs. 2004–2006

1995–1997Time →2004–2006
AgriculturePrimary
STABLE
0.38
0.40
00.51.01.52.0
Food ProductsManufacturing
STABLE
0.24
0.25
00.51.01.52.0
ChemicalsManufacturing
STABLE
0.55
0.53
00.51.01.52.0
Basic MetalsManufacturing
STABLE
0.59
0.58
00.51.01.52.0
Electricity & GasUtilities
STABLE
0.42
0.44
00.51.01.52.0

Agriculture

Early Period (1995–1997)
σ = 0.380
Late Period (2004–2006)
σ = 0.400
Δ Change
+5.3%
Interpretation

The elasticity in Agriculture remained statistically stable over the decade. Technological change occurred as factor-augmenting productivity gains, not as changes in substitutability.

Key Finding

No significant structural breaks detected. CGE models can reasonably assume constant elasticities for medium-term policy simulations.

05

Policy Implications

The elasticity of substitution acts as a shock absorber. When a carbon cap hits the economy, agents try to substitute away from the constrained factor. If elasticities are high, the carbon price stays low. If they're low, it spikes.

Our finding that most sectors exhibit elasticities below unity for energy nests suggests that models assuming Cobb-Douglas flexibility may systematically underestimate the costs of climate policy in the short to medium term.

What This Means for Climate Policy

1

Steel cannot easily decarbonize—the low elasticity in Basic Metals means carbon taxes will increase costs substantially before substitution kicks in.

2

Transition periods matter—policy design must account for sectoral rigidity, perhaps via free allowances or longer phase-ins.

3

Model calibration is not optional—using "coffee table elasticities" distorts welfare estimates and misleads policymakers.

The Case for Precision

This study provides a comprehensive set of consistently estimated substitution elasticities covering 35 sectors. We hope to make instruments designed to evaluate policy measures ex ante more reliable—and support policymakers in their efforts to cope with global environmental challenges.

≠ 1
Cobb-Douglas rejected for most sectors
35
Sectors with consistent elasticity estimates
Stable
Elasticities constant over time

Key References

Arrow, K.J. et al. (1961): "Capital-Labor Substitution and Economic Efficiency," Review of Economics and Statistics
Solow, R.M. (1956): "A Contribution to the Theory of Economic Growth," Quarterly Journal of Economics
Kmenta, J. (1967): "On Estimation of the CES Production Function," International Economic Review
van der Werf, E. (2008): "Production functions for climate policy modeling," Energy Economics