Can Comparative Advantage Explain the Growth of us Trade?
We present a dynamic comparative advantage model in which moderate reductions in import tariffs can generate sizable increases in trade volumes over time. A fall in tariffs has two effects. First, for given factor endowments, it raises the degree of specialisation, leading to a larger volume of trade in the short run. Second, it raises the factor price of each country's abundant factor, leading to diverging paths of relative factor endowments and a rising degree of specialisation. A simulation exercise shows that a fall in tariffs produces a disproportional increase in the trade share of output as in the data. Copyright 2007 The Author(s). Journal compilation Royal Economic Society 2007.
Year of publication: |
2007
|
---|---|
Authors: | Cuñat, Alejandro ; Maffezzoli, Marco |
Published in: |
Economic Journal. - Royal Economic Society - RES, ISSN 1468-0297. - Vol. 117.2007, 520, p. 583-602
|
Publisher: |
Royal Economic Society - RES |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Neoclassical Growth and Commodity Trade
Cuñat, Alejandro, (2002)
-
Cuñat, Alejandro, (2010)
-
Specialization Patterns and the Factor Bias of Technology
Cuñat, Alejandro, (2007)
- More ...