Unión Europea e integración comercial¿resulta relevante el efecto frontera?
- Martínez San Román, Valeriano
- Bengoa Calvo, Marta
- Sánchez-Robles Rute, Blanca
ISSN: 1576-0162
Année de publication: 2012
Número: 32
Pages: 173-188
Type: Article
D'autres publications dans: Revista de economía mundial
Résumé
Este artículo se centra en el estudio de la evolución de la integración comercial en la Unión Europea. Para ello se ha utilizado un enfoque basado en los efectos frontera aplicado sobre diecinueve países europeos durante el periodo 1995-2006. Hemos empleado un modelo gravitatorio como marco de análisis, en el que los flujos bilaterales de comercio dependen del tamaño económico de los países y la distancia que les separa. Además, hemos considerado otras variables como el idioma o el hecho de compartir frontera terrestre. Con el fin de obtener estimadores consistentes, evitar la posible heteroscedasticidad y tratar de una manera correcta la presencia de ceros en la muestra se ha empleado el método de estimación de pseudo-máxima verosimilitud de Poisson. Los resultados evidencian la existencia de efectos frontera en la UE, no obstante, dichos efectos frontera han disminuido a lo largo del periodo analizado alrededor de un 20-22% para la UE-19.
Références bibliographiques
- Anderson, J. E., and Van Wincoop, E. (2003): "Gravity with Gravitas: A Solution to the Border Puzzle", American Economic Review, 93, 170-192.
- Chen, N. (2004): "Intra-national versus International Trade in the European Union: Why Do National Borders Matter", Journal of International Economics, 63, 93-118.
- Combes, P., Lafourcade, M. and Mayer, M. (2005): "The Trade-creating Effects of Business and Social", Journal of International Economics, 63, 93-118.
- Dias, D. A. (2010): "Gravity and Globalization", mimeo, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
- Dias, D. A. (2011): "The Border Effect Puzzle Through the Rear-view Mirror: Would the Puzzle Have Existed if Today's Tools Had Been Used?" mimeo, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
- Esteban, A., Llano, C., Gallego, N. and De la Mata, T. (2012): "El comercio interprovincial de bienes en España", Working paper 3/2012, Departamento de Análisis Económico, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.
- European Commission (2011): Single Market Act-Twelve levers to boost growth and strengthen confidence. http://ec.europa.eu/internal_market/ smact/index_en.htm.
- Feenstra, R. C. (2002): "Border Effects and the Gravity Equation: Consistent Method for Estimation", Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 49, 491-506.
- Gil-Pareja, S., Llorca-Vivero, R., Martínez-Serrano, J.A., and Oliver-Alonso, J., (2005): "The Border Effect in Spain", The World Economy, 28, 1617-1631.
- Hausman J. A. and Taylor, W. H. (1981): "Panel Data and Unobservable Individual effects", Econometrica, 49, 1377-1398.
- Head, K. and Mayer, T. (2000): "Non-Europe: The Magnitude and Causes of Market Fragmentation in the EU", Review of World Economics, 136, 284-314.
- Head, K. and Ries, J. (2001): "Increasing Returns versus National Product Differentiation as an Explanation for the Pattern of US-Canada Trade", American Economic Review, 91, 858-876.
- Helliwell, J. F. (1996): "Do National Borders Matter for Québec's Trade?", Canadian Journal of Economics, 29, 507-522.
- Helliwell, J. F. (1998): How Much Do National Borders Matter?, Brookings Institution, Washington D.C.
- Helliwell, J.F. and Verdier, G. (2001): "Measuring Internal Trade Distances: A New Method Applied to Estimate Provincial Border Effects in Canada", Canadian Journal of Economics, 34, 1024-1041.
- Hillberry, R. H. (2002): "Aggregation Bias, Compositional Change, and the Border Effect", Canadian Journal of Economics, 35, 517-530.
- Hillberry, R.H. and Hummels, D., (2002): "Explaining Home Bias in Consumption: The Role of Intermediate Input Trade", NBER Working Paper No. 9020, Cambridge, MA.
- Liu, X., Whalley, J. and Xin, X., (2010): "Non-tradable Goods and the Border Effect Puzzle", Economic Modelling, 27, 909-914.
- Llano-Verduras, C., Minondo, A. and Requena-Silvente, F. (2011): "Is the Border Effect an Artefact of Geographical Aggregation?" The World Economy, 34, 1771-1778.
- McCallum, J. (1995): "National Borders Matter: Canada-US Regional Trade Patterns", American Economic Review, 37, 615-623.
- Nitsch, V. (2000): "National Borders and International Trade: Evidence from the European Union", Canadian Journal of Economics, 33, 1091-1105.
- Obstfeld, M. and Rogoff, K. (2001): "The Six Major Puzzles in International Macroeconomics: Is There a Common Cause?", in NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2000, (Eds) B. S. Bernanke and K. S. Rogoff, The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 339-412.
- Qian, Z. (2007): "FDI and European Economic Integration, Master dissertation, M. A. Economics of International Trade and European Integration", MIMEO, University of Antwerp, Belgium.
- Requena, F. and Llano, C. (2010): "The Border Effect in Spain: An Industry-level Analysis", Empirica, 37, 455-476.
- Samuelson, P. (1954): "The Transfer Problem and Transport Costs: Analysis of Effects of Trade Impediments", Economic Journal, 64, 264-289.
- Santos Silva, J. M. C. and Tenreyro, S. (2006): "The Log of Gravity", The Review of Economics and Statistics, 88, 641-658.
- Tinbergen, J. (1962): Shaping the World Economy: Suggestions for an International Economic Policy, Twentieth Century Fund, New York.
- Wei, S. J. (1996): "Intra-national versus International Trade: How Stubborn are Nations in Global Integration", NBER Working Paper No. 5531, Cambridge, MA.
- Wei, (1998): "How Reluctant are Nations in Global Integration?" MIMEO, Harvard University.
- Wolf, N. (2009): "Was Germany Ever United? Evidence from Intra-and International Trade", The Journal of Economic History, 69, 846-881.