Factor Proportions and the Growth of World Trade
| Data(s) |
20/11/2013
20/11/2013
2013
|
|---|---|
| Resumo |
Most of the expansion of global trade during the last three decades has been of the North-South kind - between capital-abundant developed and labour-abundant developing countries. Based on this observation, I argue that the recent growth of world trade is best understood from a factor-proportions perspective. I present novel evidence documenting that differences in capital-labour ratios across countries have increased in the wake of two shocks to the global economy: i) the opening up of China and ii) financial globalisation and the resulting upstream capital flows towards capital-abundant regions. I analyse their impact on specialisation and the volume of trade in a dynamic model which combines factor-proportions trade in goods with international trade in financial assets. Calibrating this model, I find that it can account for 60% of world trade growth between 1980 and 2007. It is also capable of predicting international investment patterns which are consistent with the data |
| Identificador | |
| Publicador |
University of Edinburgh |
| Relação |
SIRE DISCUSSION PAPER;SIRE-DP-2013-77 |
| Palavras-Chave | #Heckscher-Ohlin #international trade #China #financial globalisation |
| Tipo |
Working Paper |