Discussion paper

DP17204 Asymmetric Trading Costs and Ancient Greek Cities

Asymmetric transport costs arise when shipping times from point i to point j differ from shipping from point j to i. We show that such asymmetric transport costs predict distinct patterns of location in a class of models using Dixit-Stiglitz preferences. We then study factors affecting the location of cities in ancient Hellas. Prevailing winds create an environment of asymmetric trade costs in ancient Greece. We show that predictions of these models are consistent with the location of ancient cities.

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Citation

Chen, Y, Y Ioannides and F Rauch (2022), ‘DP17204 Asymmetric Trading Costs and Ancient Greek Cities‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 17204. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp17204