Adapting to within-country export barriers: Evidence from the Japan 2011 Tsunami
Abstract
How do exports respond to changes domestic costs of bringing goods to ports? In particular how strongly are ports affected by changes in the cost of exporting at neighbouring ports? To answer these questions we extend the... [ view full abstract ]
How do exports respond to changes domestic costs of bringing goods to ports? In particular how strongly are ports affected by changes in the cost of exporting at neighbouring ports? To answer these questions we extend the standard trade model with heterogenous firms to have a multiple port structure where exporting is subject to port specific local transportation costs and port specific fixed export costs as well as international bilateral trade costs. We derive a gravity equation with multiple ports and show that gravity distortion due to firm heterogeneity is conditional on port comparative advantage and resulting substitution of export across differentiated ports. We present evidence of the substitution effect using the 2011 Great Japanese Earthquake and following tsunami. This event allows us to measure the response of trade on ports not directly affected by the disaster. We detect a substitution effect for aggregate trade as well as differentiation at the sectoral level and by export destination.
Authors
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Wessel Vermeulen
(Newcastle University Business School)
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Masashige Hamano
(Waseda University)
Topic Areas
International Economics , Regional/Real Estate/Transport Economics
Session
2A » International Trade 1 (11:00 - Thursday, 4th May, Meeting Room 1)
Paper
HamanoVermeulen2017_IEA.pdf
Presentation Files
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