Journal Article

52

Climate Change and Economic Growth: An Intertemporal General Equilibrium Analysis for Egypt

Published on 1 January 2016

This study advances the state of the art in country-level computable general equilibrium analysis for climate change impact and adaptation analysis by incorporating forward-looking expectations. The analytic framework is used to explore the long-run growth prospects for Egypt in a changing climate. Based on a review of existing estimates of climate change impacts on agricultural productivity, labour productivity and the potential losses due to sea-level rise for the country, the model is used to simulate the effects of climate change on aggregate consumption, investment and income up to 2050. Available cost estimates for adaptation investments are employed to explore adaptation strategies.

The simulation analysis suggests that in the absence of policy-led adaptation investments, real GDP towards the middle of the century will be 6.5 per cent lower than in a hypothetical baseline without climate change. A combination of adaptation measures, that include coastal protection investments for vulnerable sections along the low-lying Nile delta, support for changes in crop management practices and investments to raise irrigation efficiency, could reduce the GDP loss in 2050 to around 2.6 per cent.

Authors

Dirk Willenbockel

Research Fellow

Sherman Robinson

Honorary Associate

Publication details

authors
Elshennawy, A., Robinson, S. and Willenbockel, D.
journal
Economic Modelling, volume 52, issue B

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About this publication

Region
Egypt

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