Putting Things in Order: Patterns of Trade Dynamics and Growth
Author(s) -
Robert C. Feenstra,
Andrew K. Rose
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
international trade
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w5975
Subject(s) - dynamics (music) , order (exchange) , business , sociology , pedagogy , finance
We develop a procedure to rank-order countries and commodities using dis-aggregated American imports data. We find strong evidence that both countries and commodities can be ranked, consistent with the product cycle' hypothesis. Countries habitually begin to export goods to the United States according to an ordering; goods are also exported in order. We estimate these orderings using a semi-parametric methodology which takes account of the fact that most goods are not exported by most countries in our sample. Our orderings seem sensible, robust and intuitive. For instance, our country rankings derived from dis-aggregated trade data turn out to be highly correlated with macroeconomic phenomena such as national productivity levels and growth rates.
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