Citation
Discussion Paper Details
Please find the details for DP15604 in an easy to copy and paste format below:
Full Details | Bibliographic Reference
Full Details
Title: Specialization, Market Access and Real Income
Author(s): Dominick Bartelme, Ting Lan and Andrei A. Levchenko
Publication Date: December 2020
Keyword(s): Gravity, k-means clustering, real income and trade specialization
Programme Area(s): International Macroeconomics and Finance, International Trade and Regional Economics and Macroeconomics and Growth
Abstract: This paper estimates the impact of external demand shocks on real income. Our empirical strategy is based on a first order approximation to a wide class of small open economy models that feature sector-level gravity in trade flows. The framework allows us to measure foreign shocks and characterize their impact on income in terms of reduced-form elasticities. We use machine learning techniques to group 4-digit manufacturing sectors into a smaller number of clusters, and show that the cluster-level elasticities of income with respect to foreign shocks can be estimated using high-dimensional statistical techniques. We find clear evidence of heterogeneity in the income responses to different foreign shocks. Foreign demand shocks in complex intermediate and capital goods have large positive impacts on real income, whereas impacts in other sectors are negligible. The estimates imply that the pattern of sectoral specialization plays a quantitatively large role in how foreign shocks affect real income, while geographic position plays a smaller role. Finally, a calibrated multi-sector production and trade model can rationalize both the average and the heterogeneity in real income elasticities to foreign shocks under reasonable values of structural parameters.
For full details and related downloads, please visit: https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=15604
Bibliographic Reference
Bartelme, D, Lan, T and Levchenko, A. 2020. 'Specialization, Market Access and Real Income'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=15604