Working Paper
Capital goods trade, relative prices, and economic development
Abstract: International trade in capital goods has quantitatively important effects on economic development through two channels: capital formation and aggregate TFP. We embed a multi country, multi sector Ricardian model of trade into a neoclassical growth framework. Our model matches several trade and development facts within a unified framework: the world distribution of capital goods production and trade, cross-country differences in investment rate and price of final goods, and cross-country equalization of price of capital goods. Reducing barriers to trade capital goods allows poor countries to access more efficient means of capital goods production abroad, leading to relatively higher capital output ratios. Meanwhile, poor countries can specialize more in their comparative advantage?non-capital goods production?and increase their TFP. The income gap between rich and poor countries declines by 40 percent by eliminating barriers to trade capital goods.
JEL Classification: E22; F11; O11; O4;
https://doi.org/10.24149/gwp294
Access Documents
File(s):
File format is application/pdf
https://www.dallasfed.org/institute/~/media/documents/institute/wpapers/2016/0294.pdf
Description: Full text
Bibliographic Information
Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Part of Series: Globalization Institute Working Papers
Publication Date: 2016-12-01
Number: 294
Pages: 40 pages