We show that relaxing the assumption of CES preferences in monopolistic competition has surprising implications when trade is restricted. Integrated and segmented markets behave differently, the latter typically exhibiting reciprocal dumping. Globalization and lower trade costs have different effects. The former reduces spending on all existing varieties, the latter switches spending from home to imported varieties; when demands are less convex than CES, globalization raises whereas lower trade costs reduce firm output. Finally, calibrating gains from trade is harder. Many more parameters are needed, while import demand elasticities typically overestimate the true elasticities, and so underestimate the gains from trade
We present a model of monopolistic competition and international trade in which in-come e¤ects play ...
We study the gains from trade liberalization in models with monopolistic compe-tition, firm-level he...
In an influential paper, Romer (1994) shows that the welfare gains from trade are substantially incr...
URL des Documents de travail : https://centredeconomiesorbonne.cnrs.fr/publications/Documents de tra...
We develop a general equilibrium theory of monopolistic competition and trade based on indirectly ad...
We develop a general equilibrium monopolistic competition model of trade with technical heterogeneit...
We argue that the procompetitive effect of international trade may bring about significant welfare c...
Under constant elasticity of substitution (CES) preferences and Cournot (or Bertrand) com-petition, ...
The authors study the impact of trade liberalization on the market of a differentiated good and cons...
Abstract: Models with constant-elasticity of substitution (CES) preferences are commonly employed in...
We present a general equilibrium model of monopolistic competition featuring pro-competitive effects...
International trade, like other branches of applied theory, has made enormous progress in recent dec...
We study the competitive and reallocation effects of trade opening in monopolistic competition. To t...
We present a general equilibrium model of monopolistic competition featuring pro-competitive effects...
Recent trade data exhibit the following four empirical regularities: (i) countries import only a sma...
We present a model of monopolistic competition and international trade in which in-come e¤ects play ...
We study the gains from trade liberalization in models with monopolistic compe-tition, firm-level he...
In an influential paper, Romer (1994) shows that the welfare gains from trade are substantially incr...
URL des Documents de travail : https://centredeconomiesorbonne.cnrs.fr/publications/Documents de tra...
We develop a general equilibrium theory of monopolistic competition and trade based on indirectly ad...
We develop a general equilibrium monopolistic competition model of trade with technical heterogeneit...
We argue that the procompetitive effect of international trade may bring about significant welfare c...
Under constant elasticity of substitution (CES) preferences and Cournot (or Bertrand) com-petition, ...
The authors study the impact of trade liberalization on the market of a differentiated good and cons...
Abstract: Models with constant-elasticity of substitution (CES) preferences are commonly employed in...
We present a general equilibrium model of monopolistic competition featuring pro-competitive effects...
International trade, like other branches of applied theory, has made enormous progress in recent dec...
We study the competitive and reallocation effects of trade opening in monopolistic competition. To t...
We present a general equilibrium model of monopolistic competition featuring pro-competitive effects...
Recent trade data exhibit the following four empirical regularities: (i) countries import only a sma...
We present a model of monopolistic competition and international trade in which in-come e¤ects play ...
We study the gains from trade liberalization in models with monopolistic compe-tition, firm-level he...
In an influential paper, Romer (1994) shows that the welfare gains from trade are substantially incr...