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Relationship-Specificity, Incomplete Contracts, and the Pattern of Trade

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TLDR
This paper found that countries with better contract enforcement specialize in industries that rely heavily on relationship-specific investments, and this is true even after controlling for traditional determinants of comparative advantage such as endowments of capital and skilled labor.
Abstract
When relationship-specific investments are necessary for production, under-investment occurs if contracts cannot be enforced. The efficiency loss from under-investment will differ across industries depending on the importance of relationship-specific investments in the production process. As a consequence, a country’s contracting environment may be an important determinant of comparative advantage. To test for this, I construct measures of the efficiency of contract enforcement across countries and the importance of relationship-specific investments across industries. I find that countries with better contract enforcement specialize in industries that rely heavily on relationshipspecific investments. This is true even after controlling for traditional determinants of comparative advantage such as endowments of capital and skilled labor.

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Migrants, Ancestors, and Foreign Investments

TL;DR: In this article, a simple reduced-form model of migrations is proposed to isolate the causal effect of ancestry on FDI, showing that doubling the number of residents with ancestry from a given foreign country relative to the mean increases the probability that at least one local firm engages in FDI with that country by 4 percentage points.
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Making sense of the manufacturing belt : determinants of U.S. industrial location, 1880-1920

TL;DR: The authors investigated industrial location in the USA around the turn of the 20th century using a model which subsumes both market-potential and factor-endowment arguments, and found that market potential was central to the existence of the manufacturing belt, that it mattered more than factor endowments, and that its impact came through interactions both with scale economies and with linkage effects.
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When Is Quality of Financial System a Source of Comparative Advantage

TL;DR: In this article, the authors unify these two competing schools of thought in a general equilibrium framework and show that for economies with high-quality institutions (defined by the competitiveness of the financial sector, the quality of corporate governance, and the level of property rights protection), finance is passive.
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Input tariffs, speed of contract enforcement, and the productivity of firms in India

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the complementarities between the speed of contract enforcement and the productivity gains from input tariff liberalization by using firm-level panel data from India along with an objective measure of judicial efficiency at the state level.
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Trade liberalization, outsourcing, and the hold-up problem

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify two new channels through which trade liberalization enhances international trade: lower tariffs increase the incentives of foreign suppliers to undertake cost-reducing investments and higher tariffs may prompt vertical multinational integration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The central role of the propensity score in observational studies for causal effects

Paul R. Rosenbaum, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1983 - 
TL;DR: The authors discusses the central role of propensity scores and balancing scores in the analysis of observational studies and shows that adjustment for the scalar propensity score is sufficient to remove bias due to all observed covariates.
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The Economic Institutions of Capitalism

TL;DR: The Economic Institutions of Capitalism as mentioned in this paper is a seminal work in the field of economic institutions of capitalism. Journal of Economic Issues: Vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 528-530.
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Law and Finance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined legal rules covering protection of corporate shareholders and creditors, the origin of these rules, and the quality of their enforcement in 49 countries and found that common-law countries generally have the strongest, and French civil law countries the weakest, legal protections of investors, with German- and Scandinavian-civil law countries located in the middle.
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Legal Determinants of External Finance

TL;DR: The authors showed that countries with poorer investor protections, measured by both the character of legal rules and the quality of law enforcement, have smaller and narrower capital markets than those with stronger investor protections.