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The single-region, the interregional and the multi-regional input-output (IO) table are introduced, and the differences between the three IO models based on these three sets of data are discussed. It is concluded that it is crucial to understand that the centrally important intermediate input coefficients, in fact, represent the product of a technical coefficient and, respectively, an intra-regional self-sufficiency coefficient in case of the single-region IO model, and an interregional import coefficient in case of both multi-regional models. It is, furthermore, concluded that it is mostly better to work with normalized income, employment, emissions, energy use, and other impact multipliers than with the ordinary multipliers of exogenous final demand. Finally, the chapter discusses the nature of interregional spill-over and feedback effects and how both are under-estimated by the single-region model.

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This page is a summary of: Basic, Demand-Driven IO Quantity Models, January 2019, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-33447-5_2.
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