Working Paper: NBER ID: w14956
Authors: Bruce A. Blonigen; Anson Soderbery
Abstract: Recent studies have used import data to assess the impact of foreign varieties on prices and welfare for a home country. The reliance on import data has a number of limitations. First, these papers rely on goods categories defined by the Harmonized System. Second, they define varieties using the Armington assumption that all imports coming from a particular country are one unique variety. Third, they ignore variety changes that may occur through foreign affiliate activity. In this paper, we revisit this literature by employing a detailed market-based data set on the U.S. automobile market that allows us to define goods varieties at a more precise level, as well as discern location of production and ownership of varieties. We show that estimated variety changes and their impacts on U.S. prices and welfare differ markedly for automobiles depending on whether one uses the standard import data or our more detailed market-based data. The import data and Armington assumption hide significant net variety change leading to a downward bias in the effects of net variety change, with implied welfare benefits only half what we find with our market-based data. We also show that the welfare gains from all foreign-owned varieties (both imported and from foreign affiliates) are well over 50% larger than that stemming from imported varieties alone.
Keywords: Product Variety; Welfare; Import Data; Market Data; Automobiles
JEL Codes: F12; F23; L16
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
reliance on standard import data (F14) | underestimations of net variety change (C51) |
underestimations of net variety change (C51) | downward bias in estimated welfare benefits (J32) |
new net variety change (D85) | increase in price indexes and consumer welfare (E31) |
foreign-owned varieties (F23) | welfare gains (D69) |
introduction of new varieties (Q16) | impact on effective consumer prices (F61) |