Trade, Regulations, and Growth

Trade does not stimulate growth in economies with excessive business and labor regulations. The authors examine the effect of openness on growth using cross-country regressions in both levels and changes. Results from the levels regressions imply that increased openness is associated with a lower standard of living in heavily-regulated economies. Growth regressions confirm that the effect of increased trade on growth is absent in these countries. The authors also find that once they control for the effect of trade on growth in heavily regulated economies, the evidence that trade positively affects growth is stronger than has been found in previous studies. Excessive regulations restrict growth because resources are prevented from moving into the most productive sectors and to the most efficient firms following liberalization. In addition, in highly regulated economies, increased trade is more likely to occur in the wrong goods-that is, goods where comparative advantage does not lie. The results imply that countries must create a sound business environment before trade can be used as an engine of growth.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bolaky, Bineswaree, Freund, Caroline
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2004-03
Subjects:ABSOLUTE VALUE, AVERAGE GROWTH, AVERAGE TRADE, BARRIERS TO ENTRY, BILATERAL TRADE, BILATERAL TRADE DATA, BLACK MARKET, BLACK MARKET PREMIUM, BUSINESS CLIMATE, BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT, BUSINESS SECTOR, COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE, CONSUMERS, CORRUPTION, COUNTRY REGRESSIONS, CPI, CRIME, CURRENCY, DEPENDENT VARIABLE, DEREGULATION, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DOMESTIC DEMAND, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELASTICITY, ELASTICITY OF TRADE, EMPLOYMENT, ENDOGENOUS VARIABLES, ENFORCEABILITY, ESTIMATION RESULTS, EXCHANGE RATE, EXOGENOUS VARIABLES, EXPLANATORY VARIABLES, EXPORT MARKETS, EXPORTS, FOREIGN COMPETITION, FOREIGN INVESTORS, GDP, GDP DEFLATOR, GDP PER CAPITA, GRAVITY MODEL, GROWTH PERFORMANCE, GROWTH RATES, GROWTH REGRESSIONS, HIGH ENTRY, HIGH INCOME COUNTRIES, IMPORT COMPETITION, IMPORTS, INCOME, INCOME GROUPS, INCOME GROWTH, INCOME LEVELS, INCREASE GROWTH, INDEPENDENT VARIABLE, INDUSTRIALIZED COUNTRIES, INFLATION, INFLATION RATE, INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT, INSTITUTIONAL MEASURES, INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY, INSTITUTIONAL REFORM, INVESTMENT RATIO, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LAGGED GROWTH, LANDLOCKED COUNTRIES, LAW INDEX, LEGAL ORIGIN, LONG RUN, LONG-RUN GROWTH, MACRO STABILITY, MARKET SIZE, 0 HYPOTHESIS, OPENNESS, PER CAPITA INCOME, PER CAPITA INCOMES, PER-CAPITA INCOME, POLITICAL INSTABILITY, POSITIVE EFFECTS, PRIVATE GOODS, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION PATTERNS, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PROPERTY RIGHTS, REAL GDP, REAL INCOME, REAL INCOMES, REGRESSION ANALYSIS, REGULATORY BURDEN, REGULATORY REGIME, RULE OF LAW, SIGNIFICANT EFFECT, SPECIALIZATION, STANDARD DEVIATION, STRUCTURAL CHANGE, TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY, TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, TRADE BARRIERS, TRADE DATA, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, TRADE OPENNESS, TRADE PARTNERS, TRADE REFORM, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNOFFICIAL ECONOMY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/04/3211227/trade-regulations-growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13889
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