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Three Essays on International Economics

Three Essays on International Economics
Author: Shu-Wing Eddery Lam
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

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This dissertation comprises of three essays in international macroeconomics. The first essay investigates the competition between two city states, both of which will stand in place of countries in the global scheme. Under the framework of the three-stages-game, we assume that there are two cities competing for dominance over two sectors: the manufacturing sector and the nancial sector. In addition, the government of each city state can build infrastructure to increase the competitiveness of the financial and distributive firms of its city. Under this framework, we are able to show that the amount of resources, the start-up costs of providing services, and the relative e ectiveness of their infrastructures determine the optimal amounts of infrastructures the cities decide to build, and thus also decide the equilibrium outcome of this game. In my second essay, we examine the relationship between income distribution and import patterns. The Linder hypothesis states that countries with similar economic characteristics should trade more often. However, although the total volumes of trade between these countries are similar, the traded goods may be different. This paper investigates the trading patterns of countries with similar characteristics. Specifically, we analyze the relationship between the import patterns and income distributions of importers. We develop an import similarity index to portray the composition of imports and utilize the idea of a "market overlap," a theoretical concept proposed by Bohman and Nilsson (2007), to represent the similarity of income distributions across different importing countries. We provide empirical evidence to support the notion that countries with similar income distributions display similar import patterns. We also separate countries by income level and find that income distribution exerts a positive impact on the similarity of import patterns for all but low income countries. Finally, we incorporate the characteristics of goods into our analysis and show that the positive relationship between income distributions and import patterns holds for differentiated and reference-priced goods, but not for homogeneous goods. In my final essay, we look into another aspect of international literature: the exchange rate. In the literature, we find that vector autoregressive (VAR) models and impulse response analyses are common tools to study the relationship between monetary policy and exchange rate movements. Therefore, it is important to investigate the accuracy of the VAR model. In the first part of this essay, we assume that the true, underlying, data-generating process is hump-shaped, which is the shape of the impulse response of exchange rate to a monetary policy shock. We show that results estimated from any VAR models applying AIC as their lags selection are biased. We also introduce two possible solutions to remedy this bias: the use of more lags in the VAR models or the use of the proposed loss functions estimations. These results suggest we should be cautious when interpreting empirical evidences on international literature. In the second part of the same essay, we investigate another issue that is closely related to the exchange rate and the VAR model. Under the estimation of the VAR model, the researcher implicitly assumes that the objective loss function is quadratic. However, it is a well accepted fact that monetary authority adjusts the interest rate according to policy. One of the objectives of the monetary authority is to influence the exchange rate in their favor. They estimate the size of the loss caused by deviations from the current exchange rate to the rate they desire, and then they adjust the amount of money in the international market. We propose an asymmetric loss function that monetary authorities may use to estimate the impulse response of the exchange rate to a contractionary monetary policy shock. We then compare these estimated impulse response functions to those estimated by the VAR. We find that while both of these estimated impulse response functions share the same sign, the magnitude and the duration of the shock are quite different. These results suggest that the VAR model may not be appropriate in estimating the exchange rate movement.


Three Essays on the Dynamics of Income Distribution

Three Essays on the Dynamics of Income Distribution
Author: Liming Cai
Publisher:
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1998
Genre:
ISBN:

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Abstract: Economic growth is a fascinating subject. It has been under increasingly close examination over the last decade from both theoretical and empirical perspectives. A growing portion of the literature has devoted its attention to the way economies (countries, states, regions, etc.) evolve over time. Many important questions have been brought up and addressed in numerous researches.


Essays on Firms and International Trade

Essays on Firms and International Trade
Author: Alvaro Felipe Garcia Marin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 179
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

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This dissertation empirically examines three different questions related to the behavior and performance of firms participating of international trade. In the first essay, I ask whether exporting allows firms to charge higher markups. To study this question, I use a unique dataset of Chilean manufacturing firms that contains product-level data on the price and average cost for all goods produced and exported. This allows me to compute direct markup measures, and to identify whether markups variation is accounted by different pricing policies or changes in the production cost. Although within firms the export markup premium is moderate -about 2%-, the study of the trajectories of markups before and after export entry reveals the presence of ongoing gains after export entry. While at the moment of export entry the markup of exported products is not different than the markup of domestic products, three periods after export entry the markup wedge increases to about 7-9%. A decomposition of the markup premium reveals that, within firms, the higher markups on exported products is accounted by both higher prices and marginal cost. In contrast, after export entry, prices and average cost tend to decrease. In the second essay -based on joint work with Nico Voigtlaender-, we revisit the old question of whether firms become more productive after export entry. While there is strong evidence for productivity-driven selection into exporting, previous research has mostly failed to identify export-related efficiency gains within plants. This non-result is typically derived from revenue productivity, which reflects price variation. Using a census panel of Chilean manufacturing plants, we first confirm the non-result for revenue productivity. We then compute plant-product level marginal cost as an efficiency measure that is not affected by prices. We find within-plant efficiency gains of 15-25%, the same order of magnitude as selection effects across plants. Evidence suggests that technology upgrading in combination with export entry is an important driver behind these gains. The final essay studies firms' quality patterns across destinations, when they produce products in different quality segments. I develop a quality model with non-homothetic quality demand and heterogeneity in consumers' income. The model features quality sorting of consumers according to their income level. This implies that firm's quality allocation depends not only on the average income of the country, but on the entire income distribution of the country. The main prediction of the model is related to the role of income inequality on within-firm quality patters. I find that in countries with a smaller middle classes, firms' tend to skew their exports towards products of higher quality. This effect tends to be weaker in countries with higher income. To illustrate the main predictions of the model, I use a unique dataset from the Chilean wine industry. This dataset allows me to construct measures of product quality, that are not affected by aggregation or markup issues. In line with the model's predictions, I find that firms tend export proportionally more high quality products to more unequal countries. However, I find this effect to be quantitatively important only in low and middle-income countries.