|
||||
|
||||
The Contribution of Intra-Regional and Extra-Regional Trade to Growth: Evidence from the European Union
Rossitza B. Wooster Portland State University Smile Dube California State University, Sacramento - Department of Economics Tepa M. Banda Government of the State of California January 16, 2007 Abstract: Since the formation of the World Trade Organization, the proliferation of regional trade agreements has raised concerns regarding the prospects of multilateral trade liberalization. The objective of this paper is to assess whether trade among member countries (intra-regional trade) contributes more to output growth than trade with nonmember countries (extra-regional trade) using 13 European Union states. The empirical framework first estimates a series of Granger causality tests for the trade-growth relationship for EU countries in our sample. Next, the marginal effects of intra-regional and extra-regional trade on economic growth in the EU are estimated using a standard growth model with trade intensities as our focus variables. In addition to the basic influences of investment and population growth, the results confirm the importance of trade openness for growth. More importantly, they show that intra-regional trade has had a lesser impact on growth in output per capita than extra-regional trade by almost 30% over the period 1980-2003.
Keywords: Regional Integration, Trade Patterns, Economic Growth of Open Economies JEL Classifications: F13, F43, C33 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: January 17, 2007 ; Last revised: February 24, 2007Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
© 2009 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy
This page was served by apollo4 in 0.110 seconds.