Endogenous Borders: Exploring a Natural Experiment on Border Effects

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP6909

Authors: Hans Christian Heinemeyer; Max Stephan Schulze; Nikolaus Wolf

Abstract: A large literature documents the impact of borders on trade. However, in all these studies border effects are identified from cross-sectional variation alone. We do not know the "treatment effect" of borders nor can we rule out reverse causation. Here, we exploit the border changes imposed across Europe by the peace treaties in 1919-20 as a natural experiment. We estimate the effects of borders on trade with a difference in difference approach and find that the "treatment effects" of borders are significantly smaller than the pure cross-sectional effects. We show that this is related to ethno-linguistic networks. Borders shape trade, and trade shapes borders.

Keywords: border effects; European history; treatment effects

JEL Codes: F12; F15; N13; N14


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
borders (F55)trade (F19)
borders (F55)trade flows (F10)
ethnolinguistic networks (Z13)trade patterns (F10)
new borders (F55)existing patterns of fragmentation in trade (F12)

Back to index