国际贸易难题:连接生产和偏好的解决方案

Justin Caron, Thibault Fally, J. Markusen
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引用次数: 172

摘要

国际贸易文献往往主要关注一般均衡的生产方面,给我们留下了许多经验上的困惑。例如,世界贸易的规模远远低于赫克舍尔-奥林-瓦内克(HOV)模型所预测的规模。富国之间的贸易比HOV和其他供给驱动理论所建议的要高,而富国与穷国之间的贸易要低,而且富国的贸易与gdp之比更高。我们的方法侧重于生产中商品和服务的特征与偏好特征之间的关系。特别是,我们发现,即使考虑到贸易成本和跨国价格差异,一种商品的熟练劳动强度与其收入弹性之间也存在着超过45%的强烈而显著的正相关性。探索这种相关性对实证贸易难题的影响,我们发现它可以将HOV对贸易净要素含量相对于数据方差的过度预测降低约60%。由于富国拥有相对丰富的熟练劳动力,它们在消费自己专门生产的商品和服务方面相对专业化,因此它们之间的贸易比与穷国之间的贸易更多。我们还发现,收入弹性与部门可贸易性之间存在行业层面的正相关关系,这有助于解释高收入国家的贸易占gdp的比例高于低收入国家。JEL代码:F10, F16, O10。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
INTERNATIONAL TRADE PUZZLES: A SOLUTION LINKING PRODUCTION AND PREFERENCES
International trade literature tends to focus heavily on the production side of general equilibrium, leaving us with a number of empirical puzzles. There is, for example, considerably less world trade than predicted by Heckscher-Ohlin-Vanek (HOV) models. Trade among rich countries is higher and trade between rich and poor countries lower than suggested by HOV and other supply-driven theories, and trade-to-GDP ratios are higher in rich countries. Our approach focuses on the relationship between characteristics of goods and services in production and characteristics of preferences. In particular, we find a strong and significant positive correlation of more than 45% between a good’s skilled-labor intensity and its income elasticity, even when accounting for trade costs and cross-country price differences. Exploring the implications of this correlation for empirical trade puzzles, we find that it can reduce HOV’s overprediction of the variance of the net factor content of trade relative to that in the data by about 60%. Since rich countries are relatively skilled-labor abundant, they are relatively specialized in consuming the same goods and services that they are specialized in producing, and so trade more with one another than with poor countries. We also find a positive sector-level correlation between income elasticity and a sector’s tradability, which helps explain the higher trade-to-GDP ratios in high-income relative to low-income countries. JEL Codes: F10, F16, O10.
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