Paul Krugman's model of trade predicts that the country with the relatively large number of consumers is the net exporter and hosts a disproportionate share of firms in the increasing returns sector. He terms these results 'home market effects'. This paper analyses three additional models featuring increasing returns, firm mobility, and trade costs to assess the robustness of home market effects to alternative modelling assumptions. We find strikingly similar results for two of the models that relax assumptions about the nature of demand, competition and trade costs. However, a model that links varieties to nations rather than firms can generate opposite results
This paper examines the home market effect in the framework of heterogeneous firms. The paper finds...
Trade patterns in New Trade Theory models and agglomeration pat-terns in New Economic Geography mode...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...
Paul Krugman's model of trade predicts that the country with the relatively large number of consumer...
International audiencePaul Krugman's model of trade predicts that the country with the relatively la...
We extend Krugman's (1980) two-country two-sector model to a setup with arbitrary numbers of countri...
The home market effect (HME) is a distinguishing feature of the new theory of international trade,...
We extend Krugman's (1980) two-country two-sector model to a setup with arbitrary numbers of countri...
It is uncertain whether the fundamental “home market effect” (HME) generalizes from a two-country mo...
In a ground-breaking work, Krugman (1979, 1980) have launched the now so-called New Trade theory, ch...
The region with a large market tends to increase the number of firms. We can often see the phenomeno...
Do small countries have higher proportions of firms that export in manufacturing industries than lar...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...
We test for home-market effects using a difference-in-difference gravity specification. The home-mar...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...
This paper examines the home market effect in the framework of heterogeneous firms. The paper finds...
Trade patterns in New Trade Theory models and agglomeration pat-terns in New Economic Geography mode...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...
Paul Krugman's model of trade predicts that the country with the relatively large number of consumer...
International audiencePaul Krugman's model of trade predicts that the country with the relatively la...
We extend Krugman's (1980) two-country two-sector model to a setup with arbitrary numbers of countri...
The home market effect (HME) is a distinguishing feature of the new theory of international trade,...
We extend Krugman's (1980) two-country two-sector model to a setup with arbitrary numbers of countri...
It is uncertain whether the fundamental “home market effect” (HME) generalizes from a two-country mo...
In a ground-breaking work, Krugman (1979, 1980) have launched the now so-called New Trade theory, ch...
The region with a large market tends to increase the number of firms. We can often see the phenomeno...
Do small countries have higher proportions of firms that export in manufacturing industries than lar...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...
We test for home-market effects using a difference-in-difference gravity specification. The home-mar...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...
This paper examines the home market effect in the framework of heterogeneous firms. The paper finds...
Trade patterns in New Trade Theory models and agglomeration pat-terns in New Economic Geography mode...
The standard two-country model of international trade with monopolistic competition predicts a more-...