Search results for "Trade theory"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

The impact of the euro on firm export behaviour: does firm size matter?

2010

The goal of this paper is to assess the impact of the euro on the relationship between firm size and exports. We employ previous new-new trade theory models to derive some hypotheses that are tested using a representative sample of Spanish manufacturing firms. The results indicate that the introduction of the euro has remarkably weakened the role of firm size in the decision to export to the Eurozone. What is more, the change in the proportion of exports to the Eurozone is negatively related to firm size. Our results suggest that the euro has reduced the threshold size in order to export to Eurozone countries. Copyright 2011 Oxford University Press 2010 All rights reserved, Oxford Universit…

Economics and EconometricsOrder (exchange)Trade theoryEconomicsManufacturing firmsInternational economicsOxford Economic Papers
researchProduct

A Scholar in Action in Interwar America: John H. Williams on Trade Theory and Bretton Woods

2009

In this paper we analyse the scientific contributions of Harvard economist John H. Williams as international trade theorist and monetary reformer together with his activities as a Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In the first 2 Sections we first present a succinct overview of Williams’ main contributions to international trade theory and to the interwar debate on the reform of the international monetary system. Particular attention will be devoted to his early academic writings which contained different critical arguments against the two main tenets of classical international economics: the Ricardian theory of comparative advantages and the gold standard. These critic…

John H. WilliamJ.M. KeyneNew DealPresidential systemTrade theoryKey Currency ApproachMonetary policyBretton WoodAmerican Economic ThoughtNew DealExchange rateAction (philosophy)Settore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero EconomicoCentral bankEconomicsPositive economicsSettore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaRelation (history of concept)
researchProduct

Neoclassical growth, manufacturing agglomeration, and terms of trade

2007

This paper presents an integrated view of economic growth, development traps, and economic geography. We explain why there is income convergence among some countries (neoclassical regime) and income divergence among others (poverty trap regime). Income convergence (divergence) and manufacturing industry diffusion (agglomeration) are re-enforcing each other in a cumulative process. Moreover, trade openness may trigger a catch-up process of an economy that is stuck in a \"poverty trap\". This catch-up is characterized by an increase in the investment-to-GDP ratio and an improvement of the terms of trade. A new dynamic welfare gain of trade liberalization is identified, which is likely to be l…

MacroeconomicsDivergence (linguistics)Economies of agglomerationGeography Planning and DevelopmentDevelopmentIncome convergenceTerms of tradePoverty trapjel:G10jel:F12jel:O41Economicsnaagglomeration complementarities convergence dynamic trade theory dynamic welfare gains of trade poverty trap terms of trade trade liberalization
researchProduct

Dark Spots in Trade Theory: Early Testing Attempts

2020

The beginnings of the economic theory correspond to philosophers’ attempts to explain why and how do countries trade with each other. Yet even more puzzling was the question how should countries trade? It is no surprise that despite the formidable developments of the theory in the last 200 years plus, there still are dark spots in the economics of trade. Globalization has rendered the issue even murkier. Beside the fact that international trade cannot be insulated from other economic domains, which makes it inadequate for experiments, but even testing itself is cumbersome. Only, evidence on such a complex field as international trade is by no means easy to come by.

SurpriseComplex fieldGlobalizationTrade theorymedia_common.quotation_subjectEconomicsNeoclassical economicsTheory testingComparative advantagemedia_common
researchProduct

Testing the Home Market Effects in a Multi-country World: The Theory

2004

We extend the two-country model by Krugman (1980) to a multi-country set-up and show that the `home-market effect' highlighted with two countries does not readily extend to such a more general setting. In particular, we prove that the most important result, namely the disproportionate causation from demand to supply, generalizes only under the fairly implausible assumption of pairwise symmetric trade costs between all countries. We argue, therefore, that the implications of product differentiation for the structure of world trade are better characterized in terms of spatial (`accessibility') and non-spatial (`attraction') effects, and we provide a theory-based specification that suggests ho…

jel:R12jel:R11jel:F12home market effect; hub effect; market potential; new trade theory; economic geography
researchProduct