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FIDELIO model

Estimating socio-economic and environmental impacts of EU industrial, trade and innovation policies

The FIDELIO (Full Interregional Dynamic Econometric Long-term Input-Output) model is designed to estimate the socio-economic and environmental impacts of EU industrial, trade and innovation policies for a fair and sustainable EU economy. It is mostly oriented to demand policies but also flexible to incorporate supply policy shocks as well. 

It is built on a solid foundation of the FIGARO database, maintained by Eurostat and the JRC, and aims to capture spillover and rebound effects to quantify impacts on jobs, growth, investments, resource use, emissions and trade balance

The model has evolved through several versions, with the latest iteration featuring improvements in modularity, flexibility and dynamic structure. It also presents a comprehensive and transparent tool for analysing EU policy impacts in the European economy, with potential areas for further refinement and extensions to address evolving complexities and improve its credibility and applicability. 

It is used to support decision-making in different areas, such as industrial policy, trade policy and environmental policy. It helps policymakers understand the complex interdependencies within the global economy and design effective strategies for fostering sustainable growth and development.

The FIDELIO model is an activity under the AMADEUS project

Coverage

The FIDELIO model covers the 27 EU Member States, 18 non‐EU countries and a "rest of the world" region. The base year can be chosen from the period 2010-2020, with 64 industries and 64 products (NACE 2 A*64), 6 categories of final use, 12 COICOP categories of final consumption broken down by 64 products and quintiles. 

The model is divided into seven blocs: production, government, household, trade, labour, price and environment. The parameters are estimated based on the period 2010 – 2015 and other relevant literature. 

The source database comes from official statistics, either from Eurostat or from the OECD. The model comprises four different modules, featuring different levels of sophistication of the model.

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