Trade Elasticities in Aggregate Models Estimates for 191 Countries

Armington's insight that imports and domestically produced goods were imperfect substitutes has unleashed extensive estimates of the associated trade elasticity, primarily for developed countries. This notion of product differentiation, which extends symmetrically to exports and domestic goods,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Devarajan, Shantayanan
Other Authors: Go, Delfin S., Go, Delfin Sia, Robinson, Sherman
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Washington, D.C The World Bank 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: World Bank E-Library Archive - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Trade Elasticities in Aggregate Models  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Estimates for 191 Countries  |c Shantayanan Devarajan 
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300 |a 44 pages 
653 |a Macroeconomics and Economic Growth 
653 |a Armington 
653 |a Econometric Estimate 
653 |a Export Elasticity 
653 |a Trade Elasticities 
653 |a Trade Policy 
653 |a Consumption 
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700 1 |a Go, Delfin Sia 
700 1 |a Robinson, Sherman 
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520 |a Armington's insight that imports and domestically produced goods were imperfect substitutes has unleashed extensive estimates of the associated trade elasticity, primarily for developed countries. This notion of product differentiation, which extends symmetrically to exports and domestic goods, has underpinned trade-focused, computable general equilibrium models of developing countries, including the aggregate, compact version, the 1-2-3 model. Noting that estimates of trade elasticities for developing countries are few, this paper remedies the situation. Using the vector error correction model as the primary method and controlling for global trends and other factors, the analysis derives the long-run elasticity estimates for 191 countries, ranging from China (population of 1.4 billion) to Tuvalu (11,200), including 45 of 48 Sub-Saharan African countries and understudied countries such as Benin, the Republic of Congo, Niger, Fiji, Haiti, Kiribati, and Tajikistan. Import and export elasticities of high-income countries average about 1.4, reflecting the greater diversity of their economies; developing countries' elasticities average around 0.7 for imports and 0.6 for exports. Elasticities generally rise with per capita income. That the elasticity is greater than one for developed and less for developing countries implies asymmetric responses to shocks, which conforms to intuition and corroborates the analytical results from the 1-2-3 model