scholarly journals Distance and Border Effects in International Trade: A Comparison of Estimation Methods

Author(s):  
Glenn Magerman ◽  
Zuzanna Studnicka ◽  
Jan Van Hove
Author(s):  
Scott Baier ◽  
Samuel Standaert

The gravity model of international trade states that the volume of trade between two countries is proportional to their economic mass and a measure of their relative trade frictions. Perhaps because of its intuitive appeal, the gravity model has been the workhorse model of international trade for more than 50 years. While the initial empirical work using the gravity model lacked sound theoretical underpinnings, the theoretical developments have highlighted how a gravity-like specification can be derived from many models with varying assumptions about preferences, technology, and market structure. Along the strengthening of the theoretical roots of the gravity model, the way in which it is estimated has also evolved significantly since the start of the new millennium. Depending on the exact characteristics of regression, different estimation methods should be used to estimate the gravity model.


World Economy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Franco‐Bedoya ◽  
Erik Frohm

2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carsten Burhop ◽  
Nikolaus Wolf

Using newly collected patent assignment data for late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Germany and a standard econometric approach from the international trade literature—the gravity model—we demonstrate the existence of border effects on a historical technology market. We show that the geographic distance between assignor and assignee negatively affected the probability of patent assignments, as well as the fact that a state or international border separated the two contracting parties. Surprisingly, we show that the effect of a state border within Germany was nearly as large as the effect of an international border.


Author(s):  
Avinash Dixit ◽  
Victor Norman
Keyword(s):  

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