From Groundnuts to Globalization: A Structural Estimate of Trade and Growth
45 Pages Posted: 19 Sep 2006 Last revised: 10 Sep 2022
Date Written: September 2006
Abstract
Starting with Romer [1987] and Rivera-Batiz-Romer [1991] economists have been able to model how trade enhances growth through the creation and import of new varieties. In this framework, international trade increases economic output through two channels. First, trade raises productivity levels because producers gain access to new imported varieties. Second, increases in the number of varieties drives down the cost of innovation and results in ever more variety creation. Using highly disaggregate trade data, e.g. Gabon's imports of Gambian groundnuts, we structurally estimate the impact that new imports have had in approximately 4000 markets per country. We then move from groundnuts to globalization by building an exact TFP index that aggregates these micro gains to obtain an estimate of trade on productivity growth for each country. We find that in the typical country in the world, new imported varieties account for 15 percent of its productivity growth. These effects are larger in developing countries where the median impact of new imported varieties equals a quarter of national productivity growth.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Variety and Quality of a Nation's Trade
By David L. Hummels and Peter J. Klenow
-
Testing Endogenous Growth in South Korea and Taiwan
By Robert C. Feenstra, Dorsati Madani, ...
-
Export Variety and Country Productivity
By Robert C. Feenstra and Hiau Looi Kee
-
Export Variety and Country Productivity
By Robert C. Feenstra and Hiau Looi Kee
-
Product Variety and Economic Growth; Empirical Evidence for the OECD Countries
By Michael Funke and Ralf Ruhwedel
-
Product Variety and Economic Growth: Empirical Evidence for the OECD Countries
-
Putting Things in Order: Patterns of Trade Dynamics and Growth
-
Do Tariffs Matter for the Extensive Margin of International Trade? An Empirical Analysis
By Peter Debaere and Shalah Mostashari
