International Standards and International Trade: Empirical Evidence from ISO 9000 Diffusion

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP9047

Authors: Joseph A. Clougherty; Michal Grajek

Abstract: Empirical scholarship on the standards-trade relationship has been held up due to methodological challenges: measurement, varied effects, and endogeneity. Considering the trade-effects of one particular standard (ISO 9000), we surmount methodological challenges by measuring standardization via national penetration of ISO 9000, allowing standardization to manifest via multiple (quality-signaling, information/compliance-cost, and common-language) channels, and using instrumental variable, multilateral resistance and panel data techniques to overcome endogeneity. We find evidence of common-language and quality-signaling augmenting country-pair trade. Yet, ISO-rich nations (most notably European) benefit the most from standardization, while ISO-poor nations find ISO 9000 to represent a trade barrier due to compliance-cost effects.

Keywords: Networks; Standards; Technical Trade Barriers

JEL Codes: C51; F13; L15


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
Home nation ISO 9000 diffusion (L15)Exports (F10)
Host nation ISO 9000 diffusion (L15)Exports (F10)
Home nation ISO 9000 diffusion and Host nation ISO 9000 diffusion (L15)Exports (F10)

Back to index