Working Paper: NBER ID: w12673
Authors: Richard E. Baldwin; Virginia Di Nino
Abstract: This paper tests whether trade in new goods is partially responsible for the pro-trade effects of the euro and provides a measure of the size of the effect. It works with a very large data set (about 16 million observations) covering twenty countries at the most disaggregated level of trade data that is publicly available. Using predictions from a heterogeneous-firms trade model in a multi-country environment to structure our empirical model, we find that the euro had a positive impact on trade overall. Our findings provide supportive but not conclusive evidence for the new-goods hypothesis. We also determined the pro-trade effect of euro-usage on non-Euroland nations trading with euro-users. We confirmed the absence of trade diversion for non-Eurozone EU members with sizeable overall increase comparable to that of members.
Keywords: heterogeneous firms; eurozone; trade effects; Melitz model; extensive margin
JEL Codes: F12; F31; F4; F41
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
euro usage (F36) | trade overall (F10) |
eurozone membership (F36) | increased trade volumes (F19) |
eurozone membership (F36) | intra-eurozone trade (F19) |
eurozone membership (F36) | trade with non-eurozone countries (F49) |
euro usage (F36) | export of new products (F10) |
euro usage (F36) | existing trade flows (F19) |