自由贸易真的能提高生产率吗?来自非洲的证据

Lauren R. Bresnahan, I. Coxhead, Jeremy Foltz, Tewodaj Mogues
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引用次数: 27

摘要

理论预测贸易自由化会提高制造业企业的平均全要素生产率(TFP)。然而,这是一种一般性的预测,依赖于对产业、要素市场和贸易模式的既定假设,而这些假设可能不太适合发展中国家。利用加纳、肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚在20世纪90年代(贸易政策自由化相当迅速的时期)的企业层面数据,我们估计了贸易对生产率的影响。我们的分析证实了众所周知的出口强度与企业高生产率之间的联系;然而,“通过出口学习”或与出口增加相关的生产率提高的证据好坏参半,出口国的TFP平均增长为负。我们的分析表明,这种下降很可能是由于外部关税降低的影响,因为随着外部关税税率的降低,低于出口无利可图的企业一级生产率边际会下降。我们还发现,对世界其他地区的销售和对其他非洲经济体的销售对生产率增长率有不同的影响,而且由于各国的具体原因,这些影响并不一致。控制初始生产率和出口目的地(在非洲境内或境外)有助于我们理解为什么在某些情况下,出口参与与全要素生产率的负增长有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does Freer Trade Really Lead to Productivity Growth? Evidence from Africa
Theory predicts that trade liberalization should raise average total factor productivity (TFP) among manufacturing firms. However, this is a generic prediction and depends on maintained assumptions about industries, factor markets, and trade patterns that may not fit well for developing countries. Using firm-level data from Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania during the 1990s, a period of fairly rapid trade policy liberalization, we estimate productivity effects of trade. Our analysis confirms the well-known association between export intensity and higher productivity of the firm; however, the evidence for “learning by exporting,” or an increase in productivity associated with greater exports, is mixed, with several instances of negative average TFP growth among exporters. Our analysis indicates that such declines are likely attributable to the effects of lower external tariffs, because the firm-level productivity margin below which exporting is unprofitable moves down as the external tariff rate is reduced. We also find that sales to the rest of the world and sales to other African economies have differential effects on productivity growth rates, and that for country-specific reasons, these effects are not uniform. Controlling for initial productivity and the destination of exports (within or outside Africa) helps us understand why in some cases, export participation is associated with negative rates of TFP growth.
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