《Interacting factor endowments and trade costs》.pdf
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Interacting factor endowments and trade costs:
a multi-country, multi-good approach to trade theory
James R. Markusen
University of Colorado, Boulder
Anthony J. Venables
London School of Economics
Abstract
Classic trade questions are reconsidered by generalizing a factor-proportions model to multiple
countries, multiple goods or multi-stage production, and country-specific trade costs. The focus
is on the interaction between a country’s relative endowment and its trade cost in determining its
production specialization, trade volume, factor prices, and welfare. We begin with a symmetric
three-good case, comparing trade to autarky. Trade costs play a particularly interesting role for
countries with endowments near the world average. Then we consider trade in a two-good case
and allow one good to fragment into two stages. Production specialization and the volume of
trade are higher with fragmentation for most countries but interestingly, for a large block of
countries, these variables fall following fragmentation. Countries with moderate trade costs
engage in market-oriented assembly, while those with lower trade costs engage in export-
platform production. These two cases correspond to the concepts of horizontal and vertical
affiliate production in the literature on multinational enterprises. Increases in specialization and
the volume of trade accelerate as trade costs go to zero with and without fragmentation.
this version: December 27th , 2005
This paper has mutated a number of times, due in part to very helpful comments and suggestions made at
a number of presentations. The authors thank participants at conferences and workshops in Hydra
Greece, Trinity
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