Trade and productivity: an industry perspective

We use a sample of 14 OECD countries and 15 manufacturing industries to test for the effect of trade on productivity. Endogeneity concerns are accounted for using the geographical component of trade as instrument as suggested by Frankel and Romer (Am Econ Rev 89(3):279–399, 1999). We find that trade...

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Veröffentlicht in:Empirica 2008, Vol.35 (2), p.213-231
Hauptverfasser: Badinger, Harald, Breuss, Fritz
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description We use a sample of 14 OECD countries and 15 manufacturing industries to test for the effect of trade on productivity. Endogeneity concerns are accounted for using the geographical component of trade as instrument as suggested by Frankel and Romer (Am Econ Rev 89(3):279–399, 1999). We find that trade, measured in terms of the export ratio, increases productivity, even if country-fixed effects such as the quality of institutions are controlled for, though results are less robust for imports. Estimates at the aggregate manufacturing level turn out much larger, emphasizing the role of inter-industry spillovers.
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subjects Capital stock
Competition
Econometrics
Economic impact analysis
Economic theory
Economics
Economics and Finance
Estimates
European Integration
F14
F43
Geography
Impact analysis
Imports
Industrial economics
Industrial Organization
Industrial productivity
International Economics
International trade
L60
Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics
Manufacturing
Original Paper
Productivity
Productivity growth
Public Finance
Studies
Trade
Trade relations
Trade volume
title Trade and productivity: an industry perspective
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