Determinants of Tanzanian Export Prices

. This paper uses firm-level data to study the pricing-behavior of Tanzanian exporters. The important question of how exporting firms make pricing decisions has not received significant attention in the trade literature, which is more focused on factors that determine export flows. The results of the paper show that the free on board price of Tanzanian exports is differentiated both across exporters -- within product-destination pairs -- and across markets -- within firm-product pairs. Moreover, contrasting with existing evidence, price differentiation across destinations seems to be mainly relevant for homogenous goods. This result could indicate either that goods classified as homogeneous can potentially be differentiated by their intrinsic quality (such as coffee), or that firms charge different mark-ups in different markets. Although further work is needed to confirm what leads to price dispersion, allowing for the possibility that food products can be vertically differentiable amplifies the spectrum of existing opportunities for developing countries to exploit product differentiation and market niches. The study also discusses the implications of the empirical findings in light of the predictions of price and quality competition models, but finds that the results cannot be explained by a single trade model of quality or price competition.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rollo, Valentina
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-10
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES, AGRICULTURE, AUCTION, AVERAGE PRICE, BENCHMARK, BRAND, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, COMPETITION FRAMEWORK, COMPETITIVENESS, CONFIDENTIALITY, CONSUMER PRICE, CONSUMERS, CUSTOMS UNION, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DIFFERENTIATED GOODS, ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS, ECONOMIC INTEGRATION, ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE, ELASTICITY, ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION, EMERGING MARKETS, EXCHANGE RATE, EXCHANGE RATES, EXPORT GROWTH, EXPORT MARKET, FOOD PRICES, FOREIGN BUYERS, FUTURE RESEARCH, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, HOMOGENOUS GOODS, INCOME, INFORMATION SYSTEM, INFORMATION SYSTEMS, INPUT PRICES, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, LDCS, LIBERALIZATION, LOCAL CURRENCY, MARGINAL COST, MARGINAL COSTS, MARKET ACCESS, MARKET ENTRY, MARKET INFORMATION, MARKET POWER, MARKET PRICES, MARKET SHARE, MARKETING, MERCHANDISE, MERCHANDISE EXPORTS, OUTPUT, PAYMENT SYSTEM, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POSITIVE EXTERNALITY, PRICE COMPETITION, PRICE DECREASES, PRICE TAKERS, PRICING STRATEGIES, PRODUCER PRICE, PRODUCT DIFFERENTIATION, PRODUCT QUALITY, PRODUCTIVITY, PROFIT MAXIMIZATION, SALES, SUBSTITUTION, TAXATION, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, VARIABLE COSTS, WAREHOUSE, WEALTH, WHOLESALERS, WORLD ECONOMY, WORLD MARKET, WORLD TRADE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/10/16829837/determinants-tanzanian-export-prices
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12060
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