Globalization, Returns to Accumulationa and the World Distribution of Output

56 Pages Posted: 4 Jul 2004 Last revised: 14 Nov 2022

See all articles by Paul Beaudry

Paul Beaudry

University of British Columbia (UBC) - Vancouver School of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Fabrice Collard

Universite de Toulouse I - CNRS (GREMAQ and IDEI)

Date Written: June 2004

Abstract

This paper examines the extent to which the process of globalization can explain the observed widening in the cross--country distribution of output--per--worker. In particular examine whether the opening up of trade in a Hecksher--Ohlin type model of trade can explain the observed changes. On the theoretical front the model highlights that, when the labor market is subject to a holdup problem, then the opening up of trade can cause an increase in the dispersion of income across countries similar to that observed in the data due to the emergence of a discrepancy between the private and social returns to capital accumulation that favors capital abundant countries. On the empirical front, we document the relevance of the model by examining whether growth patterns, decomposition exercises and specialization patterns support the model's predictions. Overall we find that over 50% of the recently observed increase in income dispersion across countries can be accounted for by the mechanism exemplified by the model.

Suggested Citation

Beaudry, Paul and Collard, Fabrice, Globalization, Returns to Accumulationa and the World Distribution of Output (June 2004). NBER Working Paper No. w10565, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=557199

Paul Beaudry (Contact Author)

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Fabrice Collard

Universite de Toulouse I - CNRS (GREMAQ and IDEI) ( email )

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