Growth Before and After Trade Liberalization

The empirical study of the impact of trade liberalization has not convinced the skeptics about the economic gains after trade reforms. Some have even argued that trade reforms have led to economic collapse and to deindustrialization. Using a sample that excludes countries that were subject to major exogenous disruptions, the authors note that post-reform economic growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than before the reforms. This is remarkable considering that pre-reform periods were characterized by highly expansionary state policies and large external borrowing, and the crisis years that preceded trade liberalization in the comparisons are eliminated. Through multivariate fixed effects estimations the authors calculate that annual per capita GDP growth rates increased by up to 2.6 percentage points after the trade reforms, compared to a counterfactual that takes into consideration the evolution of several growth determinants. Moreover, trade liberalization has been followed by an acceleration of growth in investment, exports of goods and services, and manufacturing exports, and as opposed to common belief, outward orientation did not lead to significant deindustrialization and actually seems to have increased export diversification. Growth acceleration occurred irrespective of income per capita level and was quite significant in Sub-Saharan Africa. As expected, small countries benefited most from the reforms.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Salinas, Gonzalo, Aksoy, Ataman
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2006-11
Subjects:ABSOLUTE VALUE, AGGREGATE INCOME, ANNUAL GROWTH, AVERAGE GROWTH, AVERAGE TARIFFS, BENEFITS OF TRADE, CAPITAL ACCUMULATION, CAPITAL INFLOWS, CAPITAL INVESTMENT, CONDITIONAL CONVERGENCE, CONSTANT RETURNS TO SCALE, CONVERGENCE HYPOTHESIS, CURRENCY, CURRENT ACCOUNT, CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE, DEBT, DEPENDENT VARIABLE, DEREGULATION, DEVALUATION, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS, ECONOMETRICS, ECONOMIC CRISIS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC IMPACT, ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE, ECONOMIC REFORM, ECONOMIC STAGNATION, ECONOMICS, EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, EMPIRICAL GROWTH LITERATURE, EMPIRICAL LITERATURE, EMPIRICAL STUDIES, ERROR TERM, EXCHANGE RATE MISALIGNMENT, EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION, EXPORTS, EXTERNAL DEBT, EXTERNAL SHOCKS, EXTERNALITIES, FIXED EFFECTS, FOREIGN CAPITAL, FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT, FOREIGN EXCHANGE, FREE TRADE, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GROSS CAPITAL FORMATION, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, GROWTH DETERMINANTS, GROWTH LITERATURE, GROWTH MODEL, GROWTH MODELS, GROWTH PERFORMANCE, GROWTH RATE, GROWTH RATES, GROWTH REGRESSIONS, HIGH GROWTH, HUMAN CAPITAL, IMPACT OF TRADE, IMPACT OF TRADE LIBERALIZATION, IMPACT OF TRADE REFORMS, IMPORT SUBSTITUTION, IMPORT SUBSTITUTION INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMPORTS, INCOME, INCOME CONVERGENCE, INCREASE GROWTH, INDEPENDENT VARIABLE, INDEPENDENT VARIABLES, INDUSTRIALIZATION, INTERMEDIATE INPUTS, INVESTMENT POLICY, LABOR FORCE, LONG-RUN GROWTH, MACROECONOMIC POLICIES, MARKET ECONOMY, MARKET FAILURES, MEASURE OF TRADE, MONOPOLY, NATIONAL INCOME, NON-TARIFF BARRIERS, OIL PRICES, OPEN TRADE, OPEN TRADE REGIME, OPENNESS, OUTPUT GROWTH, PANEL REGRESSIONS, PER CAPITA GROWTH, POLICY CHANGES, POLICY RESEARCH, POLICY STANCE, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, PROTECTIONISM, REAL EXCHANGE RATE, SAVING RATE, STATE POLICIES, STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT, STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT PROGRAMS, STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT REFORMS, SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA, TARIFF BARRIERS, TARIFF STRUCTURE, TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT, TERMS OF TRADE, TRADE ASSISTANCE, TRADE BARRIERS, TRADE FLOWS, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, TRADE OPENING, TRADE OPENNESS, TRADE POLICIES, TRADE POLICY, TRADE REFORM, TRADE REFORMS, TRADE REGIME, TRADE REGIMES, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, VALUE ADDED, WIDESPREAD CONSENSUS, WTO,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2006/11/7186405/growth-before-after-trade-liberalization
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8864
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!