We estimate the effect of international trade on average labour productivity across countries. Our empirical approach relies on a summary measure of trade that, we argue, is preferable to the one conventionally used on both theoretical and empirical grounds. In contrast to the marginally significant and non-robust effects of trade on productivity found previously, our estimates are highly significant and robust even when we include institutional quality and geographic factors in the empirical analysis. We also examine the channels through which trade and institutional quality affect average labour productivity. Our finding is that trade works through labour efficiency, while institutional quality works through physical and human capital acc...
Recent theoretical models predict gains from international trade coming from intra-industry realloca...
Recent theoretical models predict gains from international trade coming from intra-industry realloca...
This article distinguishes two sources of productivity increases, namely product/process innovations...
Abstract: We find that international trade has an economically significant and statistically robust ...
Recognizing that gains historically attributed to trade capture instead the roles of institutions a...
Previous studies on the determinants of productivity emphasized the role of trade and institutions b...
Abstract: We use a sample of 14 OECD countries to test for the effect of trade on productivity at di...
There is a general consensus regarding the positive relationship between trade and productivity grow...
Abstract We use a sample of 14 OECD countries and 15 manufacturing industries to test for the effect...
Using aggregate manufacturing data and a cross-section of 40 countries, we estimate the effects of t...
While theoretical models suggest that trade is likely to increase productivity and income levels, th...
This paper examines the effect of trade openness on the productivity of skilled labor intensive and ...
We examine the effect of trade on productivity growth using data from nine manufacturing industries ...
The authors examine the effect of trade on productivity growth using data from nine manufacturing in...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Recent theoretical models predict gains from international trade coming from intra-industry realloca...
Recent theoretical models predict gains from international trade coming from intra-industry realloca...
This article distinguishes two sources of productivity increases, namely product/process innovations...
Abstract: We find that international trade has an economically significant and statistically robust ...
Recognizing that gains historically attributed to trade capture instead the roles of institutions a...
Previous studies on the determinants of productivity emphasized the role of trade and institutions b...
Abstract: We use a sample of 14 OECD countries to test for the effect of trade on productivity at di...
There is a general consensus regarding the positive relationship between trade and productivity grow...
Abstract We use a sample of 14 OECD countries and 15 manufacturing industries to test for the effect...
Using aggregate manufacturing data and a cross-section of 40 countries, we estimate the effects of t...
While theoretical models suggest that trade is likely to increase productivity and income levels, th...
This paper examines the effect of trade openness on the productivity of skilled labor intensive and ...
We examine the effect of trade on productivity growth using data from nine manufacturing industries ...
The authors examine the effect of trade on productivity growth using data from nine manufacturing in...
Sectoral differences are generally argued to be important for understanding cross-country productivi...
Recent theoretical models predict gains from international trade coming from intra-industry realloca...
Recent theoretical models predict gains from international trade coming from intra-industry realloca...
This article distinguishes two sources of productivity increases, namely product/process innovations...