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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Gains from Trade when Firms Matter

TLDR
In this paper, the authors focus on three sources of gains from trade: 1) love-of-variety gains associated with intra-industry trade, 2) allocative efficiency gains resulting from shifting labor and capital out of small, less-productive firms and into large, more-productive ones, and 3) productive efficiency gain associated with trade-induced innovation.
Abstract
The rising prominence of intra-industry trade and huge multinationals has transformed the way economists think about the gains from trade. In the past, we focused on gains that stemmed either from endowment differences (wheat for iron ore) or inter-industry comparative advantage (David Ricardo's classic example of cloth for port). Today, we focus on three sources of gains from trade: 1) love-of-variety gains associated with intra-industry trade; 2) allocative efficiency gains associated with shifting labor and capital out of small, less-productive firms and into large, more-productive firms; and 3) productive efficiency gains associated with trade-induced innovation. This paper reviews these three sources of gains from trade both theoretically and empirically. Our empirical evidence will be centered on the experience of Canada following its closer economic integration in 1989 with the United States—the largest example of bilateral intra-industry trade in the world—but we will also describe evidence for other countries.

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ReportDOI

Trade Theory with Numbers: Quantifying the Consequences of Globalization

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review a recent body of theoretical work that aims to put numbers on the consequences of globalization and highlight how various economic considerations, such as market structure, firm-level heterogeneity, multiple sectors, intermediate goods, and multiple factors of production, affect the magnitude of gains from trade liberalization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prices, Markups and Trade Reform

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how prices, markups and marginal costs respond to trade liberalization and find that firms offset their reducussions in marginal costs by raising markups.
Posted Content

Prices, Markups and Trade Reform

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how prices, markups and marginal costs respond to trade liberalization and find that trade liberalisation lowers factory-gate prices and that output tariff declines have the expected procompetitive effects, however, the price declines are small relative to the declines in marginal costs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Firm Performance in a Global Market

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce an empirical framework to analyze how firm performance is affected by increased globalization, and discuss recent work on measuring the impact of various shocks firms face in the global marketplace, such as reductions in trade costs (through lowering tariffs and abolishing quotas).
Book ChapterDOI

Principles of microeconomics (I)

Abstract: Economic profit = total revenue total economic cost • Total economic cost includes the value of all inputs used in production. • Normal profit is an economic cost since it occurs when economic profit is zero. It represents the opportunity cost of labor and capital contributed to the production process by the producer. • Accounting profits are computed only on the basis of explicit costs, including labor and capital. Since they do not take "normal profits" into consideration, they overstate true profits.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of Trade on Intra-Industry Reallocations and Aggregate Industry Productivity

TL;DR: This paper developed a dynamic industry model with heterogeneous firms to analyze the intra-industry effects of international trade and showed how the exposure to trade will induce only the more productive firms to enter the export market (while some less productive firms continue to produce only for the domestic market).
Book

Innovation and growth in the global economy

TL;DR: Grossman and Helpman as discussed by the authors developed a unique approach in which innovation is viewed as a deliberate outgrowth of investments in industrial research by forward-looking, profit-seeking agents.
Posted Content

Scale Economies, Product Differentiation, and the Pattern of Trade

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a simple formal analysis which incorporates these elements, and show how it can be used to shed some light on some issues which cannot be handled in more conventional models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Increasing returns, monopolistic competition, and international trade

TL;DR: The authors developed a simple, general equilibrium model of non-comparative advantage trade and showed that trade and gains from trade will occur, even between countries with identical tastes, technology, and factor endowments.
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