The Long-Run Effects of Tradeon Income and Income Growth

This paper examines the dynamic relationship between trade and income. While most economists agree that increased trade leads to an increase in average income, economic theory is ambiguous about the possible effects on the long-run growth rate of the economy. Using a dynamic panel data model, the hypotheses of no long-run effects of trade on income and on income growth are tested explicitly. The possibility of endogeneity is addressed by constructing an instrument for trade by extending Frankel and Romer's (1999) cross-sectional approach to the case of a panel data model. The empirical results indicate that trade has a large and significant effect on the level of income, but the effect on income growth is small and non-robust to model specification.
Publication date: February 2003
ISBN: 9781451845594
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Development - Economic Development , International - Economics , panel data model , trade share , gdp per capita , bilateral trade , growth rate , international trade , Economic Growth of Open Economies , Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development , Comparative Analysis of Economic Systems

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