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Wacziarg: Measuring the Dynamic Gains from Trade

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Past literature on trade has found a positive relationship between openness and growth ... 2. its nontariff barriers covered on average more than 40% of imports (NTB) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Wacziarg: Measuring the Dynamic Gains from Trade


1
Wacziarg Measuring the Dynamic Gains from Trade
  • By Alan Fiedorek and Jenya Parkman

2
Introduction
  • Past literature on trade has found a positive
    relationship between openness and growth
  • Rodrik and Rodriguez (2000) disputed the positive
    association because of problems measuring
    openness

3
Goals of this paper
  • To improve the existing measures of trade policy
    openness
  • To define the channels through which trade
    openness affects growth

4
Why trade can be good
  • Technological spillovers and international
    transmission of knowledge
  • Allocative efficiency (specialization according
    to comparative advantages)
  • Bigger market ? economies of scale
  • Leads to less distortionary domestic policies and
    disciplined macroeconomic management

5
Why trade can be bad
  • Comparative advantage leads some countries to
    specialize in dead-end industries
  • More trade necessitates bigger government and
    higher taxesThe explanation appears to be that
    government consumption plays a risk-reducing role
    in economies exposed to a significant amount of
    external risk. Rodrik (1998)

6
Wacziargs Innovative Ideas
  • New measure of trade openness Based on a
    weighted average of tariff revenues, nontariff
    barriers and an indicator of overall outward
    orientation
  • Explicit links between trade and growth
  • Equations for six specific channels through
    which trade effects growth

7
Government Policy Channels
  • Openness leads to macroeconomic policies that
    encourage stability, so domestic firms can
    compete on a global market.
  • Openness may have ambiguous effects on the size
    of government

8
Allocation and Distribution Channels
  • There are lower degrees of price distortion in
    open economies. Price distortion has adverse
    effects on factor accumulation and growth.
    Easterly (1993) Distorted input prices cause
    inefficiency in production while higher black
    market exchange rates discourage investment
  • Trade openness encourages factor accumulation
    through creation of a bigger market and
    importation of previously unavailable capital
    goods and recent technologies

9
Caveat
  • The author asserts that theres a direct
    tautological link between increased investment
    and growth. However, Robert Solows growth theory
    emphasizes that growth in technology (Á/A g) is
    what drives economic growth.

10
Technological Transmissions Channel
  • If open economies are more exposed to a worldwide
    stock of productivity-enhancing knowledge, then
    trade openness can affect growth and convergence
    through technology transmissions
  • Trade openness has an ambiguous effect on Foreign
    direct investment (FDI). Study by Harrison and
    Revenga (1995) suggests that open economies
    attract more FDI than closed ones. FDI increases
    growth through imports of capital goods and
    diffusion of knowledge and expertise

11
Empirical Methodology
  • Three-stage least squares regression
  • The model consists of an equation for the growth
    of per capita income, one for determining the
    nature of trade policy, and six channel equations
    describing the effects of trade policy on several
    growth determining variables (398)

12
The Equation
  • ?/y Á/A a(?/k) ß(?/h)
  • Growth is driven by growth in technology, and
    per-capita growth in physical and human capital
  • The 6 channel equations attempt to isolate the
    effect of trade policy on these determinants of
    growth

13
The Data
  • 57 countries 21 OECD, 13 Asia (China excluded),
    12 Latin America, 11 Africa
  • Four five-year periods from 1970-1989
  • Endogeneity bias is a concern? author instruments
    for every endogenous variable appearing as a
    regressor

14
Measurement Issues
  • 3 categories of existing measures of trade
    openness Outcome measures, Policy indicators,
    Deviation measures.
  • Outcome measures arent good because they suffer
    from endogeneity bias and dont reflect policy
    attitudes. Since outcome measures have been
    discredited, we must choose between the other
    two.

15
Deviation Measures
  • Measures difference between observed trade volume
    and predicted free-trade volume to determine how
    restrictive the trade regime is
  • 3 problems predictions are likely to be
    incomplete and inaccurate, determinants may be
    correlated with policy, and white noise
    disturbance term.

16
Policy Indicators
  • Institutional features reflect a countrys
    position on trade.
  • Problems are endogeneity problems with growth,
    limited data availability, dont reflect possible
    black-market loopholes, and weakly correlated
    among themselves
  • However, this can be overcome by combining the
    variation in several measures to obtain an
    indicator of trade openness

17
The Trade Policy Openness Index
  • Wacziargs index is based on the impact that a
    countrys trade policy openness has on its trade
    (importsexports) as a ratio of GDP
  • Trade to GDP ratio can be seen as a result of
    policy, factor endowment and gravity determinant
    variables. The author controlled for the effect
    of the factor endowment and gravity determinant
    variables to isolate the variation in trade among
    countries attributable to a variety of trade
    policy measures.

18
Components of the Index
  • Tariff barriers Uses the share of import duty
    revenues in total imports IMF
  • Nontariff barriers Unweighted coverage ratio for
    pre-Uruguay Round time period published by
    UNCTAD. Weight in overall index reduced because
    of difficulties measuring these barriers.
  • Liberalization Status Sachs and Warner variable
    used to account for time variations in nontariff
    barriers that are unaccounted for due to data
    unavailability.

19
Sachs and Warner variable
  • Countries classified as closed if they failed one
    of these tests
  • 1. it had average tariff rates higher than 40
    (TAR)
  • 2. its nontariff barriers covered on average more
    than 40 of imports (NTB)
  • 3. it had a socialist economic system (SOC)
  • 4. it had a state monopoly of major exports
    (MON)
  • 5. its black market premium exceeded 20 during
    either the decade of the 1970s or the decade of
    the 1980s (BMP).

20
Criticisms of Sachs and Warner variable
  • Rodrik and Rodriguez (2000), argue that this
    variable is constructed to be conducive to
    finding a positive effect of openness on growth
    because much of the variation is attributable to
    the black market premium on the exchange rate and
    the state monopoly of exports
  • The Sachs-Warner measure is so correlated with
    plausible groupings of alternative explanatory
    variablesmacroeconomic instability, poor
    institutions, location in Africa--that it is
    risky to draw strong inferences about the effect
    of openness on growth based on its coefficient in
    a growth regression. (RR 2000)
  • Therefore, Wacziarg presents his data with and
    without this liberalization status variable.

21
Trade Shares Regressions
  • Trade Policy 1 -34.73Import Duty Share -
    0.22Nontariff Barriers 11.26Liberalization
    Status
  • Trade Policy 2 -60.91Import Duty Share
    0.24Nontariff Barriers

22
Summary Statistics for Growth and Openness
  • These correlations suggest that the relationship
    between trade policy openness and growth, if any,
    will be conditional on other determinants (408)

23
Measurement of Channel Variables 1
  • Uncontroversial and precise
  • 1. FDI
  • 2. Government consumption
  • 3. domestic investment rate
  • all measured as a share of GDP

24
Measurement of Channel Variables 2
  • Quality of macroeconomic policy is measured by an
    average of the level of public debt and
    government deficit both as percentages of GDP,
    and growth of M2 net of total real output growth
  • Technology transmission is approximated by the
    share of manufactured exports in total
    merchandise exports (imperfect proxy alert)
  • Price distortions are measured by the black
    market premium on the official exchange rate

25
Correlations (as expected)
  • Trade policy is positively related to FDI, macro
    policy quality, manufactured exports, and
    domestic investment ratio
  • Each of these is positively correlated with
    growth
  • Trade policy is negatively related to the black
    market premium, and government size
  • Each of these are negatively associated with
    growth

26
Empirical Results
3.3 -9.2 3.3 64 20 18 100
27
Result from Trade Policy 1
  • An 8.5 ( 1 st. dev.) increase in trade policy
    measure results in a 0.601 increase in annual
    growth.

28
Empirical Results
-10 -30.5 -0.6 86.1
74.6 -19.3 100
29
Result from Trade Policy 2
  • An 8 ( 1 st. dev.) increase in trade policy
    measure results in a 0.246 increase in annual
    growth.
  • Relationship between trade policy and growth is
    cut by more than half.

30
Robustness to the Specification
31
Robustness to Time Coverage
  • To account for the possibility that the results
    are only significant due to one particular 5-year
    period, the author runs 4 regressions excluding
    each of the periods
  • Includes data for 1990-1992 to widen the time
    span
  • Uses 10-year periods to reduce the impact of
    short-term variability

32
Other Possible Channels
Human Capital
Income Inequality
33
Unconditional effect and residual test
  • Direct correlation between trade openness and
    growth (omitting all channels) is highly
    significant and of the same magnitude.
  • The residual effect of trade policy is positive,
    but not significantly different from zero
    instilling confidence in the exhaustiveness of
    the trade channels

34
Conclusion
  • Trade openness affects growth mainly by raising
    the ratio of domestic investment to GDP
  • FDI and quality of macroeconomic policy also have
    significant effects
  • Future research should strive to improve measures
    of technology transmission and price distortions

35
Problems
  • Manufactured exports are a terrible proxy for
    technology transmission
  • Lots of collinearities between the different
    channels make it unclear whether the results are
    accurately reflecting the effects of these
    channels
  • Only 2 of 6 channels are statistically
    significant when Sachs and Warner variable is
    omitted

36
Questions
  • What would be a better proxy for technological
    transmissions?
  • Through what other channels do you think trade
    affects growth?
  • Which channels do you think are particularly
    interconnected?
  • What are the policy implications of this paper?
  • Do you think that data from the last twenty years
    would change the findings of this paper?
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