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Trade costs and democracy

Siroën, Jean-Marc; Granger, Clotilde; Duc, Cindy (2004), Trade costs and democracy. https://basepub.dauphine.fr/handle/123456789/6251

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Type
Document de travail / Working paper
Date
2004
Publisher
Université Paris-Dauphine
Series title
Cahiers de recherche d'EURISCO
Series number
2004-14
Published in
Paris
Pages
19
Metadata
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Author(s)
Siroën, Jean-Marc cc
Granger, Clotilde
Duc, Cindy
Abstract (EN)
During the three past decades, most developing countries have opted for both a higher degree of political democracy as well as increased trade openness. This trend raises the question of the effect of democracy on trade liberalization. To address the question, this paper proposes a theoretical analysis based on a variant of an HOS model, but assuming allocative effects between the export sector and the non-tradable sector. This analytical framework preserves the Stolper-Samuelson effects, even with complete specialization of countries. Furthermore, it is assumed that in democratic regimes, the policies enforced are those preferred by the median-voter. If, in a country, the tradable sector is labour-intensive , workers gain from free trade and a democratic government should adopt trade liberalization policies. We expose a political economic theoretical model in which democracies apply a tariff to imports all the lower as the other trade costs are low. The theoretical model has led to a gravity equation so that the expected positive relation between democracy and trade can be tested econometrically. We are interested in the influence of democracy on trade costs and test the idea that institutional trade costs are lower when trade occurs between democracies. Econometric estimations confirm that bilateral trade is positively and significantly affected when the two partners are democratic.
Subjects / Keywords
Econometric estimations; democracy; trade liberalization
JEL
C21 - Cross-Sectional Models; Spatial Models; Treatment Effect Models; Quantile Regressions
F13 - Trade Policy; International Trade Organizations
H23 - Externalities; Redistributive Effects; Environmental Taxes and Subsidies
P16 - Political Economy

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