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Book Essays on International Trade and Economic Geography

Download or read book Essays on International Trade and Economic Geography written by Andrei Victor Potlogea and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 258 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis provides an investigation of the effects of trade, technology and natural resource shocks on local economies and local labor markets. In the first chapter, I explore theoretically the impact of recent improvements in communication technology on the configuration of economic geography at multiple levels of spatial disaggregation. I show that a simple model of the organization of global supply chains can rationalize several salient stylized facts concerning the recent evolution of the spatial economy. In the second chapter, I empirically investigate the impact of changes in US trade policy triggered by China's WTO accession on Chinese local economies. I find that improvements in US market access had an important impact on local economic outcomes and on the spatial configuration of economic activity within China. In the third chapter I investigate the impact of large oilfield discoveries on local labor markets, with a particular focus on the effects on the economic prospects of women. I find that while large mineral endowments do not slow the process of women joining the labor force, they do lead to a higher gender wage gap.

Book Essays on International Trade and Economic Geography

Download or read book Essays on International Trade and Economic Geography written by Avtandil Abashishvili and published by . This book was released on 2023 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays in International Trade and Economic Geography

Download or read book Essays in International Trade and Economic Geography written by Sau Lai Book and published by . This book was released on 2021 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "The thesis consists of three chapters that study internal economic geography, spatial frictions, and firms' multiple dimensions of export behavior. They feature an explicit spatial structure within an exporting country and examine how the differences in geographical characteristics affect firms' extensive and intensive margins of trade activities, as well as price-setting behavior. The first chapter studies firms' learning from exporting peers in different spatial networks to reduce uncertainty in a foreign market's demand, formalizing the relationship between spatial frictions in learning and the extensive margin of trade activities. Evidence suggests that the learning effect is stronger when there are more geographically close neighbors to learn from, precision or the strength of the signal increases, and when the firm starts exporting to a market dissimilar from its previously served markets. The second chapter analyzes the role of internal distance, measured by geographical distance to the nearest port infrastructure, on shipment costs, volumes, and frequencies. It establishes the links between spatial heterogeneity in trade costs and the intensive margin of trade activities. A simple structural model is used to estimate shipment costs at the firm-product-destination level. Evidence reveals that shipment costs correlate positively with the internal distance, favouring large and infrequent shipments for geographically distant exporters. The third chapter examines the role of internal distance in quality differentiation and price-setting behavior of exporters. Empirical findings suggest that free-on-board export unit price decreases systematically with internal distance, and the effect is stronger in shipments of differentiated or knowledge-intensive products. It presents a theoretical framework that features quality differentiation across space to rationalize these empirical patterns"--

Book Economy

    Book Details:
  • Author : Ron Martin
  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Release : 2017-11-30
  • ISBN : 1351159186
  • Pages : 723 pages

Download or read book Economy written by Ron Martin and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2017-11-30 with total page 723 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Economic geographers have always argued that space is key to understanding the economy, that the processes of economic growth and development do not occur uniformly across geographic space, but rather differ in degree and form as between different nations, regions, cities and localities, with major implications for the geographies of wealth and welfare. This was true in the industrial phase of global capitalism, and is no less true in the contemporary era of post-industrial, knowledge-driven global capitalism. Indeed, the marked changes occurring in the structure and operation of the economy, in the sources of wealth creation, in the organisation of the firm, in the nature of work, in the boundaries between market and state, and in the regulation of the socio-economy, have stimulated an unprecedented wave of theoretical, conceptual and empirical enquiry by economic geographers. Even economists, who traditionally have viewed the economy in non-spatial terms, as existing on the head of the proverbial pin, are increasingly recognising the importance of space, place and location to understanding economic growth, technological innovation, competitiveness and globalisation. This collection of previously published work, though containing but a fraction of the huge explosion in research and publication that has occurred over the past two decades, seeks to convey a sense of this exciting phase in the intellectual development of the discipline and its importance in grasping the spatialities of contemporary economic life.

Book Essays in Trade and Economic Geography

Download or read book Essays in Trade and Economic Geography written by Megha Mukim and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis tests the predictions of theoretical models of trade and economic geography using micro-data from India. As part of a large, poor and rapidly developing country, Indian households receive a disproportionate share of attention from development economists. However, there remain large gaps in the understanding of its other microentities - firms. In Chapter 1, I use detailed panel-level data on 8,253 manufacturing firms from 1990 to 2008 and demonstrate how firms that export differ from their counterparts who cater to the domestic market. After identifying the extent to which the act of exporting drives these differences, I provide evidence that Indian exporters performed better than nonexporters at the outset, and that exporting positively impacts further productivity increases. In Chapters 2, 3 and 4, I focus on how economic activity in India organises itself along economic geography factors. Chapter 2 studies firms in the Indian informal sector, who have largely escaped close scrutiny before. Using data from national sample surveys on over 4 million manufacturing and services enterprises, I find that firms choose to locate in particular districts across the country. I show that existing agglomeration within these locations, such as that of intermediate buyers and suppliers, is driving the location decisions of new firms. In Chapter 3, using previously inaccessible data on inward FDI, I find that foreign investors also show evidence of clustering and that existing agglomeration and the business environment jointly drive this behaviour. In Chapter 4, I collect data from the Indian Patent Office and my analysis concludes that regional innovation is largely a function of public research and development and economic clustering. In summary, this thesis uses new data and robust methodological approaches to provide important economic insights into the workings of firms in India and the factors affecting their productivity and their location decisions.

Book Essays on New Economic Geography and International Trade

Download or read book Essays on New Economic Geography and International Trade written by Dionysios Karavidas and published by . This book was released on 2017 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Four Essays on Economic Geography  Trade and Development

Download or read book Four Essays on Economic Geography Trade and Development written by Souleymane Coulibaly and published by . This book was released on 2008 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays in International Trade and Economic Geography

Download or read book Essays in International Trade and Economic Geography written by Camilo Umana Dajud and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 172 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation focuses on the role played by trade cost in the shaping of trade flows. While the last two chapters examine the role of unconventional trade costs, the first two assess the impact of more traditional domestic and international trade costs. Chapter 1 is a joint effort with Jules Hugot. In this chapter we estimate the elasticity of trade to distance and its evolution since 1870. For this purpose we take advantage of four important episodes in the history of international trade: the openings of the Suez and Panama canals and the later closure and reopening of the first. In Chapter 2 I study the effect of a reduction of domestic transport costs. To address the endogeneity of infrastructure placement, I exploit the natural experiment provided by the opening of intercoastal shipping routes connecting the west and east coasts of Canada through the Panama Canal. Chapter 3 documents the negative impact of travel visas on bilateral trade flows. In order to estimate their causal effect I exploit a natural experiment provided by changes in Annex I of the Schengen agreements. I show that the subsequent introduction of visas to enter the Schengen Space considerably reduced bilateral trade flows. In chapter 4 I examine empirically the impact of politics on trade flows. Following Eysenck's depiction of the political spectrum, I show that distance separating countries on the different dimensions of the political spectrum has a robust negative impact on bilateral exchanges.

Book International Trade and Economic Geography

Download or read book International Trade and Economic Geography written by Gianmarco Ireo Paolo Ottaviano and published by . This book was released on 1994 with total page 78 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Looking for Orders of Magnitude

Download or read book Looking for Orders of Magnitude written by Nicole Andréa Mathys and published by . This book was released on 2007 with total page 143 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on International Trade and Domestic Economic Geography

Download or read book Essays on International Trade and Domestic Economic Geography written by Toshihiro Atsumi and published by . This book was released on 2009 with total page 580 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays in Economic Geography and Development

Download or read book Essays in Economic Geography and Development written by Dominick Bartelme and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page 138 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation investigates the role of trade and trade frictions in shaping the internal structure of economies over time. The first chapter investigates how trade costs in generating the spatial distribution of wages and employment across regions, a classic question in economic geography. It make several contributions to the extensive theoretical and empirical literature on this question. First, building on the recent literature I show that for a wide class of economic geography models the positive implications of changes in trade costs are entirely captured by two reduced form elasticities: the elasticities of wages and employment with respect to market access. Second, I develop a novel instrumental variable approach to consistently estimating these elasticities from changes in observed wages and employment using exogenous changes in the incomes of each location's trading partners. I implement this approach using data on U.S. MSAs between 1990 and 2007 and find that wages and employment are quite sensitive to differences in market access due to trade costs. Counterfactual simulations indicate that eliminating trade costs would result in large shifts in employment from the Northeast towards the South and West and a flattening of the city size distribution. More modest reductions in trade costs result in qualitatively similar outcomes that remain quantitatively large. The second chapter investigates how trade in intermediate inputs across industries varies with the level of development, and how this variation is related to the cross-country variation in productivity. We know that specialization is a powerful source of productivity gains, but how production networks at the industry level are related to aggregate productivity in the data is an open question. This chapter constructs a database of input-output tables covering a broad spectrum of countries and times, develop a theoretical framework to derive an econometric specification, and document a strong and robust relationship between the strength of industry linkages and aggregate productivity. We then calibrate a multisector neoclassical model and use alternative identification assumptions to extract an industry-level measure of distortions in intermediate input choices. We compute the aggregate losses from these distortions for each country in our sample and find that they are quantitatively consistent with the relationship between industry linkages and aggregate productivity in the data. Our estimates imply that the TFP gains from eliminating these distortions are modest but significant, averaging roughly 10\% for middle and low income countries. The third chapter brings these two themes together to explore how trade costs across industries and space shape the spatial distribution of industries. The motivation and specific context is the decline of the U.S. manufacturing belt over the post-war period and the spread of industrial production to the South and West. To study the causes of this geographic dispersion of industry, this chapter first develops a multi-industry model with many locations, local external economies and input-output relationships across industries. The second contribution is to develop an estimation strategy for the parameters, including the strength of local Marshallian externalities and the size of trade costs, that does not rely on the availability of comprehensive internal trade data. I then apply this strategy to data on U.S. industry location across cities between 1970 and 1995. I find that trade costs have declined substantially over this time period, and that local external economies are on average quite strong at the industry level. These findings together suggest that only modest productivity convergence together with the decline in trade costs are sufficient to explain the decline of the manufacturing belt.

Book The Bases of Economic Geography

Download or read book The Bases of Economic Geography written by Ronald R. Boyce and published by . This book was released on 1974 with total page 392 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Productivity  Economic Geography and Trade

Download or read book Essays on Productivity Economic Geography and Trade written by Rodrigo A. Echeverria and published by . This book was released on 2006 with total page 244 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This dissertation investigates the relative importance of firm-specific and geographic characteristics for export behavior in the Chilean primary and processed food industries. The first essay develops a new method for measuring geographic characteristics to account for economic activity in adjacent, but separate spatial units. In the application to the Chilean manufacturing industry, the proposed index better identifies the presence of locational forces (e.g., technological spillovers or natural advantages) than do traditional indexes. Results suggest a higher geographic concentration of Chilean manufacturing firms through technological spillovers in highly populated areas, and access to natural resources in areas that are farther from large cities. The second essay analyzes the determinants of Chilean farms' decision to produce exportables, i.e., export participation. An export behavior model is estimated using farm-level data from the Chilean Census of Agriculture and a two-stage conditional maximum likelihood procedure. Results show that a farm's efficiency or productivity is more important than its location for its export participation. When a high-productivity farm locates in a region with better geographic characteristics, its likelihood of producing for export markets is higher. On the other hand, an opposite result is obtained when a low-productivity farm locates in regions with better geographic attributes. The latter suggests that farms must achieve a minimum level of efficiency for geographic characteristics to positively affect their export participation. The third essay investigates firms' decision to export as well as that on how much to export (intensity) in the Chilean processed food industries. Results show the relative importance of sunk costs, foreign ownership and firm size in the Chilean firms' export decision. Productivity and geography play a more prominent role in firms' export-intensity decision in selected industries. In general, firm-specific characteristics appear to be more important than geographic attributes for export behavior. The three essays contribute to a better understanding of firms' export behavior, in particular those in the Chilean agriculture and processed food industries. By providing insights into factors affecting export behavior, these three essays have implications for public policies to encourage firms' participation in global markets.

Book Three Essays on Economic Geography

Download or read book Three Essays on Economic Geography written by Susana Iranzo and published by . This book was released on 2003 with total page 332 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Essays on Economic Geography and Networks

Download or read book Essays on Economic Geography and Networks written by Yuhei Miyauchi and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page 175 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis consists of three chapters that analyze how the networks of firms, people, and locations shape socio-economic activities. The first chapter analyzes the role of supplier to buyer matching in the firm-to-firm trade as a source of geographic concentration of economic activities. Using a panel of firm-to-firm trade data covering over a million Japanese firms, I first provide evidence that the new supplier matching rate upon unexpected supplier bankruptcies increases in locations and industries when there are more alternative suppliers selling in the buyer's location, while this rate remains stable in the presence of other buyers looking for a match. I then estimate a new structural trade model that incorporates dynamic firm-to-firm matching across space in a standard Melitz model and concludes that this agglomeration mechanism drives a large part of spatial inequality of firm density and real wages in Japan. The second chapter (co-authored with Gabriel Kreindler) investigates how people's mobility patterns are associated with urban spatial economic activities. We use cell phone transaction data to extract commuting flows at a fine spatially and temporarily scale, and use a model to empirically associate commuting flows with spatial economic activity distributions in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. We validate our predicted measures of economic activities with a government survey and show several applications to provide a proof of concept of our approach. The third chapter develops an econometric framework to estimate structural parameters underlying a network formation model. I show that the set of equilibria is a complete lattice under certain conditions, and extend this characterization to an econometric framework based on the moment inequality model. I then apply this method to a student friendship network formation in the U.S.

Book Essays on Geography and Economic Development

Download or read book Essays on Geography and Economic Development written by Brian J. L. Berry and published by . This book was released on 1960 with total page 208 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: