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Gravity with History: On Incumbency Effects in International Trade

Author

Listed:
  • Peter Egger
  • Reto Foellmi
  • Ulrich Schetter

    (Center for International Development at Harvard University)

  • David Torun

Abstract

We introduce incumbency effects into a tractable dynamic model of international trade. The framework nests the canonical Melitz (2003)-Chaney (2008) model as a special case. The key novelty is that fixed costs of market access decrease with tenure. As a consequence, there is less market exit and entry in response to a shock. We derive a gravity equation and show that, ceteris paribus, countries that liberalized their trade relationship earlier trade more today. We provide supporting evidence for the underlying mechanism and derive an augmented ACR formula (Arkolakis et al., 2012) for the gains from trade that accounts for incumbency effects. A quantitative analysis suggests that our mechanism can explain up to 25% of countries’ home shares and that the gains from trade are, on average, 10% larger when accounting for incumbency effects. The analysis further reveals novel distributional effects of trade that benefit real wages but reduce profits.

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Handle: RePEc:glh:wpfacu:219
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File URL: https://growthlab.hks.harvard.edu/sites/projects.iq.harvard.edu/files/growthlab/files/2023-07-cid-fellows-wp-153-incumbency-effects.pdf
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More about this item

Keywords

incumbency effects; sunk cost of market access; gravity equation; gains from trade; home bias; path dependence;
All these keywords.

JEL classification:

  • F12 - International Economics - - Trade - - - Models of Trade with Imperfect Competition and Scale Economies; Fragmentation
  • F14 - International Economics - - Trade - - - Empirical Studies of Trade
  • F15 - International Economics - - Trade - - - Economic Integration
  • F17 - International Economics - - Trade - - - Trade Forecasting and Simulation

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