Title
Accounting for Trade Patterns
Author(s)
Stephen J. Redding Stephen Redding (Princeton University)
David E. Weinstein David Weinstein (Columbia University)
Abstract
We develop a quantitative framework for exactly decomposing trade patterns into economically meaningful components. We derive price indexes that determine comparative advantage across countries and sectors and the aggregate cost of living. If firms and products are imperfect substitutes, we show that these price indexes depend on variety, average demand or quality, and the dispersion of demand or quality-adjusted prices, and are only weakly related to standard empirical measures of average prices, thereby providing insight for elasticity puzzles. Of the cross-section (time-series) variation in comparative advantage, 50 (90) percent is accounted for by variety and average demand or quality, with average prices contributing less than 10 percent.
Creation Date
2018-03
Section URL ID
Paper Number
2018-10
URL
http://www.princeton.edu/~reddings/papers/AMMPT-07Mar2018-paper.pdf
File Function
Jel
F11, F12, F14
Keyword(s)
comparative advantage, trade, prices, quality, variety
Suppress
false
Series
13