Search results for "Trade cost"

showing 10 items of 12 documents

Trade Liberalization and Heterogeneous Technology Investments

2015

We propose a trade model where heterogeneous firms decide on a productivity-enhancing technology investment. The model analyzes the impact of multilateral trade liberalization on firm- and industry-level productivity. Freer trade increases the incentives to invest in technology by raising export profits. It also dampens these incentives, however, as profits stemming from domestic sales are reduced. Only exporters benefit from the former positive effect. The shape of the distribution of efficiency draws, the level of trade costs and the technology intensity of the industry are key elements removing the ambiguities regarding the net impact of trade liberalization.

Economic integrationbusiness.industryGeography Planning and DevelopmentDistribution (economics)ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTINGInternational economicsInternational tradeDevelopmentInvestment (macroeconomics)Trade costIncentiveEconomicsbusinessTrade barrierProductivityFree tradeReview of International Economics
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The real exchange rate in the long run: Balassa-Samuelson effects reconsidered

2017

Historical data for over hundred years and 14 countries is used to estimate the long-run effect of productivity on the real exchange rate. We find large variations in the productivity effect across four distinct monetary regimes in the sample period. Although the traditional Balassa-Samuelson model is not consistent with these results, we suggest an explanation of the results in terms of contemporary variants of the model that incorporate the terms of trade mechanism. Specifically we argue that changes in trade costs over time may affect the impact of productivity on the real exchange rate over time. We undertake simulations of the modern versions of the Balassa-Samuelson model to show that…

Economics and Econometrics050208 finance05 social sciencesjel:F31Balassa-SamuelsonSample (statistics)jel:F41Trade costTerms of tradeSettore SECS-P/06 - Economia ApplicataReal exchange rateExchange ratereal exchange rates productivity Balassa Samuelson terms of trade0502 economics and businessEconometricsEconomicsBalassa-Samuelson model050207 economicsProductivityreal exchange rates productivity Balassa-Samuelson model terms of tradeFinanceProductivityTerms of trade
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Offshoring and Sequential Production Chains: A General-Equilibrium Analysis

2021

The Canadian journal of economics = Revue canadienne d'économique (2021). doi:10.1111/caje.12506

Economics and Econometrics330OffshoringGeneral equilibrium theoryTechnological change05 social sciencesjel:F10Trade costjel:D24jel:F23Microeconomicsjel:L23GlobalizationMarket structure0502 economics and businessEconomicsddc:330Production (economics)Offshoring sequential production global production chain task trade050207 economics
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How endogenous asymmetries in interregional market access trigger regional divergence

2005

We investigate how asymmetric trade patterns in differentiated products affect the regional distribution of economic activities. The asymmetry in interregional market access is an endogenous result of price competition and industry location and arises for intermediate values of trade costs. We show that the emergence of one-way trade in differentiated products gives rise to strong agglomeration forces and leads to the absorption of the smaller region's industry by the larger region. The number of spatial equilibria increases once the pattern of trade is endogenously accounted for. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Economics and EconometricsDivergence (linguistics)Economies of agglomerationbusiness.industryMarket accessDistribution (economics)Product differentiationInternational economicsTrade costUrban StudiesCompetition (economics)MicroeconomicsEconomicsbusinessRegional Science and Urban Economics
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Trade Costs, Trade Balances, and Current Accounts: an application of Gravity to Multilateral Trade

2005

In this paper we test the well-known hypothesis of Obstfeld and Rogoff (NBER Macroeconomics Annual 7777:339–390, 2000) that trade costs are the key to explaining the so-called Feldstein–Horioka puzzle. Our approach has a number of novel features. First, we focus on the interrelationship between trade costs, the trade account and the Feldstein–Horioka puzzle. Second, we use the gravity model to estimate the effect of trade costs on bilateral trade and, third, we show how bilateral trade can be used to draw inferences about desired trade balances and desired intertemporal trade. Our econometric results provide strong support for the Obstfeld and Rogoff hypothesis and we are also able to recon…

Economics and EconometricsFeldstein–Horioka puzzle - Trade costs - Gravity model - Home bias puzzle - Current account - Trade balanceFeldstein–Horioka puzzleBalance of tradejel:F10jel:F32Current accountMonetary economicsTrade costFeldstein-Horioka puzzle; trade costs; gravity model; home bias puzzle; current account; trade balanceBilateral tradeFeldstein-Horioka puzzle trade costs gravity model home bias puzzle current account trade balancecurrent account; Feldstein-Horioka puzzle; gravity model; home bias; puzzle; trade balance; trade costsGravity model of tradeEuropean integrationEconomics
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Do foreign workers reduce trade barriers? Microeconomic evidence

2015

This paper provides evidence that foreign workers reduce firms' trade costs and thus increase the probability that firms export. This informs both the literature on trade costs and the microeconomic literature on firms' export behaviour. We identify the nationality of each worker in a large sample of German establishments, and relate this to the exporting behaviour of these establishments. We allow for the possible endogeneity of an establishment's workforce by instrumenting the share of foreign workers with the regional distribution of foreign workers in the wider labour market. We find a significant effect of worker nationality on exporting which is not driven by the industrial, occupatio…

Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsbusiness.industry05 social sciencesDistribution (economics)Trade costLarge sampleGravity model of tradeAccounting0502 economics and businessPolitical Science and International RelationsWorkforceEconomicsNationalityEndogeneity050207 economicsTrade barrierbusinessFinance050205 econometrics
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INTERNATIONALIZATION STRATEGIES IN OLIGOPOLY WITH HETEROGENEOUS FIRMS

2016

This paper examines the foreign direct investment (FDI) versus exports decision of foreign oligopolistic firms under cost heterogeneity. An additional motivation for firms to invest abroad is the technological sourcing via spillovers, which flow from the host more efficient firm to foreign less advantaged firms. For intermediate values of the set-up costs associated with FDI entry, it is shown that foreign firms choose opposite entry strategies. An equilibrium where the less efficient foreign firm exports whereas the more efficient invests is more likely to happen when foreign firms become more heterogeneous, the larger the trade costs and not too big oligopolistic profitability. Interestin…

Economics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesPublic policyMonetary economicsForeign direct investmentTrade costOligopolyMicroeconomicsInternationalization0502 economics and businessEconomicsProfitability index050207 economicsWelfare050205 econometrics media_commonMarket failureBulletin of Economic Research
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The factor content of regional bilateral trade: The role of technology and demand

2011

Abstract The Heckscher–Ohlin–Vanek (HOV) model in its strict form has been strongly rejected by the data. Relaxing some assumptions of the standard HOV model is key to find improvements in its performance. We apply the Davis and Weinstein (2001) methodology to analyse the validity of the HOV model using regions rather than countries. Surprisingly, our results using data for 17 Spanish regions are similar to theirs with international data for OECD countries. Accounting for technological differences improves the predictive capacity of the factor proportions model and including trade costs and geography reduces significantly the missing trade problem. However, relaxing the assumption of factor…

MacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsBilateral tradeFactor priceEconometricsEconomicsOecd countriesGravity equationTrade costFinanceInternational Review of Economics & Finance
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Estimating the gravity equation with the actual number of exporting firms

2013

Para estimar correctamente el efecto de los costes de comerciar sobre las exportaciones de las empresas, la ecuación de gravedad debe controlar por el número de empresas que opera en el mercado internacional. Debido a la ausencia de datos, estudios anteriores han controlado esta variable mediante técnicas econométricas que también pueden generar estimaciones sesgadas. Para superar estos problemas este trabajo estima una ecuación de gravedad utilizando una nueva base de datos de la OCDE y EUROSTAT , que incluye el número de empresas exportadoras en cada relación bilateral. Nuestros resultados muestran que no controlar el margen extensivo genera sesgos muy importantes en la estimación de los …

MacroeconomicsEconomics and Econometricslcsh:HB71-74F14F15Control (management)trade costslcsh:Economics as a scienceOmitted-variable biasTrade costjel:F14lcsh:Economic history and conditionsVariable (computer science)jel:F15Margin (machine learning)exporting firmsOECDddc:330EconomicsEconometricslcsh:HC10-1085Gravity equation exporting firms distance trade costs OECD.Gravity equationGravity equationdistance
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Fixed Costs Per Shipment

2011

Exporting firms do not only decide how much of their products they ship abroad but also at which frequency. Doing so, they face a trade-off between saving on fixed costs per shipments (by shipping large amounts infrequently) and saving on storage costs (by delivering just in time with small and frequent shipments). The firm's optimal choice defines a mapping from size and frequency of shipments to fixed costs per shipment. We use a unique dataset of Swiss cross-border trade on the transaction level to analyze the size and shape of the underlying fixed costs. The data suggest that for the average Swiss exporter the fixed costs per shipment are economically important: 0.82 percent of the valu…

MicroeconomicsValue (economics)Geographic proximityData_CODINGANDINFORMATIONTHEORYBusinessFixed costTrade costDatabase transactionNet present valueIndustrial organizationVariable costSSRN Electronic Journal
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