TY - JOUR
T1 - An appraisal of alternative Ricardian trade models
AU - Brondino, Gabriel
AU - Dvoskin, Ariel
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - A prevalent feature of the global economy is the relevance of trade in intermediates due to production fragmentation. This phenomenon has led to the revival and development of trade models that include inter-industry relations. A wide variety of Ricardian trade models cope with this feature. In this article, we develop a Sraffa-Leontief framework to compare and appraise these models. The models are distinguished by their underlying theory of distribution and the assumptions about the degree of international capital mobility. We compare the predicted effects on employment and the distribution of domestic income. Furthermore, we assess if the model assures the existence of a shared trade pattern, i.e. if it can ensure that all countries engage in trade (as the principle of comparative advantage predicts). It follows from our appraisal that it is not warranted that all countries can engage in international trade, even if they want to. In other words, if allowed to work, the "strong balancing forces" may not make a country internationally competitive in a world with production fragmentation.
AB - A prevalent feature of the global economy is the relevance of trade in intermediates due to production fragmentation. This phenomenon has led to the revival and development of trade models that include inter-industry relations. A wide variety of Ricardian trade models cope with this feature. In this article, we develop a Sraffa-Leontief framework to compare and appraise these models. The models are distinguished by their underlying theory of distribution and the assumptions about the degree of international capital mobility. We compare the predicted effects on employment and the distribution of domestic income. Furthermore, we assess if the model assures the existence of a shared trade pattern, i.e. if it can ensure that all countries engage in trade (as the principle of comparative advantage predicts). It follows from our appraisal that it is not warranted that all countries can engage in international trade, even if they want to. In other words, if allowed to work, the "strong balancing forces" may not make a country internationally competitive in a world with production fragmentation.
KW - fragmentation, international trade, Ricardian, desertification
KW - fragmentation, international trade, Ricardian, desertification
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/230467
U2 - 10.1080/09538259.2023.2196939
DO - 10.1080/09538259.2023.2196939
M3 - Article
SN - 0953-8259
SP - N/A-N/A
JO - Review of Political Economy
JF - Review of Political Economy
ER -