Lumpy Trade and the Welfare Effects of Administrative Barriers

Miklós Koren, Cecília Hornok

    Research output: Book/Report typesBook

    Abstract (may include machine translation)

    Using detailed U.S. and Spanish export data, we document that administrative trade costs of per shipment nature (documentation, customs clearance and inspection) lead to less frequent and larger-sized shipments, i.e. more lumpiness, in international trade. We build a model to analyze these effects and their welfare consequences. Exporters decide not only how much to sell at a given price, but also how to break up total trade into individual shipments. Consumers value frequent shipments, because they enable them to consume close to their preferred dates. Having fewer shipments hence entails a welfare cost. Calibrating the model to observed shipping frequencies and per-shipment costs, we show that countries would gain 2–3 percent of their GDP by eliminating suchbarriers. This suggests that trade volumes alone are insufficient to understand the gains from trade.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationBudapest
    PublisherCenter for Firms in the Global Economy (CeFiG)
    StatePublished - 2011

    Publication series

    NameCeFiG Working Papers ; 14.

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