How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international trade? Anderson and Marcouiller argue that bad institutions located in the importer's country deter international trade because they enable economic predators to steal and extort rents at the importer's border. We complement this research and show how good institutions located in the exporter's country enhance international trade, in particular, trade in complex products whose characteristics are difficult to fully specify in a contract. We argue that both exporter and importer institutions affect international as well as domestic transaction costs in complex and simple product markets. International transaction costs are a part of the costs o...
Several papers have recently underlined the relationship between in-stitutional quality and internat...
Extant studies on the relationship between 'domestic institutions, comparative advantage, and intern...
Formal trade barriers and transport costs explain only part of the resistance to international trade...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
Abstract—How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence intern...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
This paper uses a Ricardian model to generate predictions about the influence of institutions on tra...
We argue that the quality of institutions that enforce contracts and protect property rights influen...
Why do domestic legal institutions matter, and why can trading parties-in particular exporters of co...
Institutions-quality of contract enforcement, property rights, shareholder protection, and the like-...
Barriers to international trade are more sizeable than can be accounted for on the basis of formal t...
Why do domestic legal institutions matter, and why can trading parties-in particular exporters of co...
Several papers have recently underlined the relationship between in-stitutional quality and internat...
Extant studies on the relationship between 'domestic institutions, comparative advantage, and intern...
Formal trade barriers and transport costs explain only part of the resistance to international trade...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
Abstract—How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence intern...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
How does the quality of national institutions that enforce the rule of law influence international t...
This paper uses a Ricardian model to generate predictions about the influence of institutions on tra...
We argue that the quality of institutions that enforce contracts and protect property rights influen...
Why do domestic legal institutions matter, and why can trading parties-in particular exporters of co...
Institutions-quality of contract enforcement, property rights, shareholder protection, and the like-...
Barriers to international trade are more sizeable than can be accounted for on the basis of formal t...
Why do domestic legal institutions matter, and why can trading parties-in particular exporters of co...
Several papers have recently underlined the relationship between in-stitutional quality and internat...
Extant studies on the relationship between 'domestic institutions, comparative advantage, and intern...
Formal trade barriers and transport costs explain only part of the resistance to international trade...