Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
962991 Journal of International Economics 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The basic gains-from-trade theorem makes a stark comparison between completely free trade and complete autarky. This paper is motivated by recent evidence that trade has greatly expanded on the extensive margin (aka fragmentation, vertical specialization, offshoring) by adding newly traded goods and services and that much of this new trade is in intermediates. I provide an extension of existing gains-from-trade results by allowing trade in an added set of final and/or intermediate goods. As seems generally understood, a sufficient condition for all countries to gain from liberalization is that the relative world prices of initially-traded goods don't change, but I don't think that this has been generalized to expanding the set of tradeables. Further, trade costs break the strict link between domestic and world prices in my approach and this results in interesting subtleties as initially-traded goods change their trade status following fragmentation. I illustrate these results by applying them to two recent and quite specific formulations of expansion at the extensive margin: Grossman and Rossi-Hansberg (2008) and Markusen and Venables (2007).
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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