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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Engel's law in the commodity composition of exports

TLDR
In this paper, the authors analyzed the gross domestic product (GDP) and international trade data based on the standard international trade classification (SITC) in the period 1962 to 2000.
Abstract
Different shares of distinct commodity sectors in production, trade, and consumption illustrate how resources and capital are allocated and invested. Economic progress has been claimed to change the share distribution in a universal manner as exemplified by the Engel's law for the household expenditure and the shift from primary to manufacturing and service sector in the three sector model. Searching for large-scale quantitative evidence of such correlation, we analyze the gross-domestic product (GDP) and international trade data based on the standard international trade classification (SITC) in the period 1962 to 2000. Three categories, among ten in the SITC, are found to have their export shares significantly correlated with the GDP over countries and time; The machinery category has positive and food and crude materials have negative correlations. The export shares of commodity categories of a country are related to its GDP by a power-law with the exponents characterizing the GDP-elasticity of their export shares. The distance between two countries in terms of their export portfolios is measured to identify several clusters of countries sharing similar portfolios in 1962 and 2000. We show that the countries whose GDP is increased significantly in the period are likely to transit to the clusters displaying large share of the machinery category.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Does Trade Cause Growth

TL;DR: This paper found that trade has a quantitatively large and robust, though only moderately statistically significant, positive effect on income and that countries' geographic characteristics have important effects on trade, and are plausibly uncorrelated with other determinants of income.
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The Growth of Bacterial Cultures

TL;DR: Bacterial growth is considered as a method for the study of bacterial physiology and biochemistry, with the interpretation of quantitative data referring to bacterial growth limited to populations considered genetically homogeneous.
Journal ArticleDOI

The nature and growth of vertical specialization in world trade

TL;DR: This paper found that vertical specialization accounts for 21% of these countries' exports, and grew almost 30% between 1970 and 1990, and also found that growth in vertical specialization accounted for 30% of the growth in these countries’ exports.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Product Space Conditions the Development of Nations

TL;DR: This study studies this network of relatedness between products, or “product space,” finding that more-sophisticated products are located in a densely connected core whereas less-sophile products occupy a less-connected periphery.
Book

Intermediate microeconomics : A modern approach

Hal R. Varian
TL;DR: The Varian approach as mentioned in this paper gives students tools they can use on exams, in the rest of their classes, and in their careers after graduation, and is still the most modern presentation of the subject.
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