Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
962604 Journal of International Economics 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Distance effects in gravity equations are high and are not decreasing over time. Given that technical change in transport technology is biased in favor of long distances, this constitutes a challenge for existing theoretical models. In line with recent empirical evidence, this paper introduces a spillover effect from the number of exporters to the fixed costs of exporting into a trade model with heterogeneous firms. Since less firms export to remote markets, the equilibrium fixed costs are increasing in distance. This creates an additional effect of distance on aggregate trade flows: while the intensive margin of trade is unaffected, the extensive margin is magnified. This magnification leads to higher predicted distance effects. In addition, it offers a new perspective on non-decreasing distance effects: a relatively moderate strengthening of the spillover over time is sufficient to generate a constant distance elasticity.

► Spillovers among exporters can rationalize high and non-decreasing distance effects. ► The spillover implies that the fixed costs decline in the number of exporters. ► This magnifies the extensive margin and increases predicted distance effects. ► A stronger spillover can rationalize non-decreasing distance effects. ► One can microfound the spillover with a model of exporter networks.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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