Sorting Out the Bilateral Trade and Income Convergence Relationship: Does Income and the Nature of Bilateral Trade Matter?

Alexander Bilson Darku, William Baah-Boateng, Ibrahim Mohammed, Wassiuw Abdul Rahaman
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Abstract

ABSTRACT: Several studies have used various datasets and methodologies to analyze the relationship between bilateral trade and income convergence among trading partners. However, most studies have not paid attention to the effect that income levels and nature of bilateral trade have on the speed of income convergence. In this paper, we argue that the income levels of trading partners and the nature of bilateral trade play important role in the relationship between bilateral trade and international income convergence. To account for the effect of income levels of trading partners, this paper presents an approach that explicitly accounts for bilateral trade among high-income (OECD) countries, bilateral trade between high-income and low-income (SSA) countries, and bilateral trade among low-income (SSA) countries. We also used total trade data for 25 OECD countries and 30 Sub-Saharan African countries over the period 1980-2018 to avoid the potential bias for selecting certain countries based on arbitrary percentage of trade relationship. We used the 2SLS estimations technique to avoid endogeneity problems due to the nature of the dataset. The paper finds that the bilateral trade-income convergence relationship for OECD to SSA is the strongest. This result throws light on the claim that the nature of bilateral trade between high-income and low-income countries promotes one directional knowledge spillover from high-income to low-income countries which enables low-income countries to adopt new technologies and grow faster than their high-income counterparts. Also, bilateral trade among OECD countries, which mostly comprises of differentiated products, promotes descent income convergence among them. However, bilateral trade among SSA countries has the least effect on income convergence. Findings of the study have important implications for bilateral trade among low-income countries and between low income and high income countries. First, if SSA countries want to develop and catch up with their rich counterparts, they should continue to promote free trade with high income countries by dismantling remaining protection policies. Second, the African Continental Free Trade Area's (AfCFTA) efforts to boost the manufacturing sector through industrialization is in the right direction to promote the production of more differentiated products in Africa which will create growth in income for member countries as they trade more. Finally, there is the need for SSA countries to increase investment rates and improve human capital accumulation to enable them to accelerate the adoption of new technologies and grow faster than their high-income counterparts, while bridging the income gap between them through trade.
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梳理双边贸易与收入趋同关系:收入与双边贸易性质重要吗?
摘要:一些研究使用不同的数据集和方法来分析双边贸易与贸易伙伴之间的收入趋同之间的关系。然而,大多数研究并未注意到双边贸易的收入水平和性质对收入趋同速度的影响。本文认为,贸易伙伴的收入水平和双边贸易的性质在双边贸易与国际收入趋同的关系中起着重要作用。为了解释贸易伙伴收入水平的影响,本文提出了一种明确考虑高收入(经合组织)国家之间双边贸易、高收入和低收入(SSA)国家之间双边贸易以及低收入(SSA)国家之间双边贸易的方法。我们还使用了1980年至2018年期间25个经合组织国家和30个撒哈拉以南非洲国家的总贸易数据,以避免基于任意贸易关系百分比选择某些国家的潜在偏见。我们使用2SLS估计技术来避免由于数据集的性质而产生的内生性问题。研究发现,OECD与SSA的双边贸易收入趋同关系最强。这一结果阐明了高收入国家和低收入国家之间双边贸易的性质促进了高收入国家向低收入国家的单向知识溢出,从而使低收入国家能够采用新技术并比高收入国家增长更快的说法。此外,经合组织国家之间的双边贸易主要由差异化产品组成,促进了它们之间的下降收入趋同。然而,SSA国家之间的双边贸易对收入趋同的影响最小。研究结果对低收入国家之间以及低收入国家与高收入国家之间的双边贸易具有重要意义。首先,如果SSA国家想要发展并赶上富裕国家,它们应该通过废除剩余的保护政策,继续促进与高收入国家的自由贸易。第二,非洲大陆自由贸易区(AfCFTA)通过工业化推动制造业发展的努力是正确的方向,可以促进非洲生产更具差异化的产品,从而在扩大贸易的同时为成员国创造收入增长。最后,撒哈拉以南非洲国家需要提高投资率,改善人力资本积累,使它们能够加快采用新技术,以比高收入国家更快的速度增长,同时通过贸易弥合它们之间的收入差距。
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