Empirical international trade [Research Reviews]

Jonathan Eaton and Samuel Kortum (2002), 'Technology, Geography, and Trade', Econometrica, 70 (5), September, 1741-79 -- Scott L. Baier and Jeffrey H. Bergstrand (2001), 'The Growth of World Trade: Tariffs, Transport Costs, and Income Similarity', Journal of International Economi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bernhofen, Daniel M.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cheltenham, UK Edward Elgar Publishing Limited 2010
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Collection: Edward Elgar eBook Archive - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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Summary:Jonathan Eaton and Samuel Kortum (2002), 'Technology, Geography, and Trade', Econometrica, 70 (5), September, 1741-79 -- Scott L. Baier and Jeffrey H. Bergstrand (2001), 'The Growth of World Trade: Tariffs, Transport Costs, and Income Similarity', Journal of International Economics, 53, 1-27
Peter K. Schott (2003), 'One Size Fits All? Heckscher-Ohlin Specialization in Global Production', American Economic Review, 93 (3), June, 686-708 -- James Harrigan (1997), 'Technology, Factor Supplies, and International Specialization: Estimating the Neoclassical Model', American Economic Review, 87 (4), September, 475-94 -- John Romalis (2004), 'Factor Proportions and the Structure of Commodity Trade', American Economic Review, 94 (1), March, 67-97 -- Daniel M. Bernhofen and John C. Brown (2004), 'A Direct Test of the Theory of Comparative Advantage: The Case of Japan', Journal of Political Economy, 112 (1. Part 1), 48-67 -- Daniel M. Bernhofen and John C. Brown (2005), 'An Empirical Assessment of the Comparative Advantage Gains from Trade: Evidence from Japan', American Economic Review, 95 (1), 208-25 --
During the last decade, international trade has witnessed a dramatic transition from a field dominated by theory to one dominated by empirics linked to theory. In this volume, Professor Bernhofen has selected an impressive range of critical papers by leading academics which have contributed significantly to making international trade an empirical science. The included topics are empirical studies on comparative advantage, the Heckscher-Ohlin model, monopolistic competition, gravity models, firms and plant trade and networks and institutions. The papers in this collection serve as an excellent introduction to the literature as well as an essential reference for research in empirical trade
Elhanan Helpman (1987), 'Imperfect Competition and International Trade: Evidence from Fourteen Industrial Countries', Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, 1, 62-81 -- David Hummels and James Levinsohn (1995), 'Monopolistic Competition and International Trade: Reconsidering the Evidence', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 110 (3), August, 799-836 -- Peter Debaere (2005), 'Monopolistic Competition and Trade, Revisited: Testing the Model Without Testing for Gravity', Journal of International Economics, 66, 249-66 -- Christian Broda and David E. Weinstein (2006), 'Globalization and the Gains from Variety', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 121 (2), May, 541-85 -- John McCallum (1995), 'National Borders Matter: Canada-U.S. Regional Trade Patterns', American Economic Review, 85 (3), June, 615-23 -- James E. Anderson and Eric van Wincoop (2003), 'Gravity with Gravitas: A Solution to the Border Puzzle', American Economic Review, 93 (1), 170-92 --
Recommended readings (Machine generated): Wassily Leontief (1953), 'Domestic Production and Foreign Trade; The American Capital Position Re-Examined', Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 97 (4), September, 332-49 -- Edward E. Leamer (1980), 'The Leontief Paradox, Reconsidered', Journal of Political Economy, 88 (3), June, 495-503 -- Harry P. Bowen, Edward E. Leamer and Leo Sveikauskas (1987), 'Multicountry, Multifactor Tests of the Factor Abundance Theory', American Economic Review, 77 (5), December, 791-809 -- Daniel Trefler (1993), 'International Factor Price Differences: Leontief was Right!', Journal of Political Economy, 101 (6), 961-87 -- Daniel Trefler (1995), 'The Case of the Missing Trade and Other Mysteries', American Economic Review, 85 (5), December, 1029-46 -- Donald R. Davis and David E. Weinstein (2001), 'An Account of Global Factor Trade', American Economic Review, 91 (5), December, 1423-53 --
Kei-Mu Yi (2003), 'Can Vertical Specialization Explain the Growth of World Trade?', Journal of Political Economy, 111 (1), 52-102 -- Andrew B. Bernard and J. Bradford Jensen (1995), 'Exporters, Jobs, and Wages in U.S. Manufacturing: 1976-1987', Brookings Papers on Economic Activity. Microeconomics 1995, 67-112, 118-19 -- Sofronis K. Clerides, Saul Lach and James R. Tybout (1998), 'Is Learning by Exporting Important? Micro-Dynamic Evidence from Colombia, Mexico, and Morocco', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 113 (3), August, 903-47 -- Andrew B. Bernard and J. Bradford Jensen (1999), 'Exceptional Exporter Performance: Cause, Effect, or Both?', Journal of International Economics, 47, 1-25 -- James E. Rauch (1999), 'Networks Versus Markets in International Trade', Journal of International Economics, 48, 7-35 -- James E. Rauch and Vitor Trindade (2002), 'Ethnic Chinese Networks in International Trade', Review of Economics and Statistics, 84 (1), February, 116-30 -- James E. Anderson and Douglas Marcouiller (2002), 'Insecurity and the Pattern of Trade: An Empirical Investigation', Review of Economics and Statistics, 84 (2), May, 342-52 -- Nathan Nunn (2007), 'Relationship-Specificity, Incomplete Contracts, and the Pattern of Trade', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 122 (2), May, 569-600
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ISBN:9781784712860