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QUEST

Macroeconomic model QUEST

Economymacroeconomic modelDSGE model

overview

Economymacroeconomic modelDSGE model

main purpose

A macro-economic model used to analyse and understand the state of the EU economy.

summary

QUEST is a macro-economic model (Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium) used to analyse and understand the state of the EU economy. It is developed by DG ECFIN, and estimated model variants have been developed jointly with support from the JRC. The first version of QUEST was applied in 2007, and many extensions have been developed since.

QUEST belongs to the class of New-Keynesian Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) models that are now widely used by international institutions and central banks. These models have rigorous microeconomic foundations derived from utility and profit optimisation and include frictions in goods, labour and financial markets. With empirically plausible estimation and calibration they are able to fit the main features of the macroeconomic time series. The QUEST model has been estimated on euro area and US data using Bayesian estimation methods. Calibrated model versions are used in wider applications.

QUEST supports questions related to policy formulation, implementation and evaluation. Many of the main applications deal with fiscal and monetary policy interactions. In order to deal with the wide range of policy issues in DG ECFIN, different model versions of the QUEST model have been constructed, each with a specific focus and regional and sectoral disaggregation.

model type

ownership

EU ownership (European Commission)
The model is owned by DG ECFIN.DDG2.B.3

licence

Licence type
Non-Free Software licence

homepage

https://ec.europa.eu/info/business-economy-euro/economic-and-fiscal-policy-coordination/economic-research/macroeconomic-models_en

details on model structure and approach

QUEST III belongs to the class of New-Keynesian Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) models that are now widely used by international institutions and central banks. These models have rigorous microeconomic foundations derived from utility and profit optimisation and include frictions in goods, labour and financial markets. With empirically plausible estimation and calibration they are able to fit the main features of the macroeconomic time series. Calibrated model versions are used for most policy applications, but the  QUEST III model has also been estimated on Euro Area, US and specific Euro Area countries (ES, DE) data using Bayesian estimation methods. 

In order to deal with the wide range of policy issues in DG ECFIN, different model versions of the QUEST III model have been constructed, each with a specific focus and regional and sectoral disaggregation. Many of the main applications deal with fiscal and monetary policy interactions and either use a one-sector model or models that explicitly distinguish tradable and nontradable sectors, and include trade in intermediates. Other  model variants also include housing and collateral constraints.

QUEST III has also been used for the analysis of structural reforms and another version has been employed for the analysis of energy and climate change policies. All these models are employed using different country disaggregations, focusing on the euro area or EU as a whole, and other global regions, or on individual member states.

The models are developed by the modelling unit in DG ECFIN. The Joint Research Centre of the European Commission supports QUEST development providing econometric, computational and methodological expertise in estimation and calibration, maintaining dedicated IT resources.

An update of some new developments of the QUEST III models was described in ECFIN Research Letter Vol.3.Issue 1/2009 (pp 10-13).  For further references on the QUEST model, see the model homepage.

model inputs

Key inputs for the estimated model versions are coming from national accounts and other macroeconomic data source. The main ones are:

  • National account data (GDP and its components, current and constant prices)
  • Labour market data (wages, employment)
  • Financial variables (interest rates)
  • Trade data
  • Monetary data (interest rates)

model outputs

Key outputs produced by the model:

  • Model parameter estimates to be used for simulation (time evolution of all macro-variables of interest in response to a shock in the economy or changes in policy) and model-based policy analysis;
  • Among the macroeconomic variables of interest, the model allows to study dynamics and economic drivers of:
    • GDP and its components
    • Price deflators
    • Fiscal variables
    • Employment, wages
    • Interest rates
    • Trade

model spatial-temporal resolution and extent

ParameterDescription
Spatial Extent/Country Coverage
EU Member states 27OECD countriesALL countries of the WORLD
Global, incl. individual EU countries, various EU aggregates (EU, Euro area, OMS, NMS, etc).
Spatial Resolution
World-regions (supranational)National
Temporal Extent
Short-term (from 1 to 5 years)Medium-term (5 to 15 years)Long-term (more than 15 years)
Estimation data range: 1985-2013 for Euro area aggregate; 1995-2013 for individual countries. Simulation horizon: the model is simulated for several periods ahead to allow convergence.
Temporal Resolution
Quarterly