Skip to content Skip to navigation
University of Warwick
  • Study
  • |
  • Research
  • |
  • Business
  • |
  • Alumni
  • |
  • News
  • |
  • About
  • Text only
  • |
  • Sign in
  • Search CSGR
  • Search University of Warwick
  • Search for people at Warwick
  • Search Warwick Blogs
  • Search past exam papers
  • Search video
  • More…

    Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation

    • News and Events
    • People
    • Research
    • Projects
    • CSGR Globalisation Index
    • Abstracts »
    • Trade Openness and Income Inequality in Developing Countries
    University of Warwick

    Trade Openness and Income Inequality in Developing Countries

    Trade Openness and Income Inequality in Developing Countries

    Elena Meschi and Marco Vivarelli

    CSGR Working Paper Series 232/07

    July 2007

     

    Abstract:

    This paper discusses the distributive consequences of trade flows in developing countries (DCs). On the theoretical side, we argue that the interplays between international openness and technology adoption may constitute an important mechanism leading to a possible increase of income differentials in the liberalizing DCs, trough skill enhancing trade.

    We use a dynamic specification to estimate the impact of trade on within-country income inequality in a sample of 70 DCs over the 1980-1999 period. Our results suggest that total aggregate trade flows are weakly related with income inequality. However, once we disaggregate total trade flows according to their areas of origin/destination, we find that trade with high income countries worsen income distribution in DCs, both through imports and exports. This finding provides a preliminary support to the hypothesis that technological differentials between trading partners are important in shaping the distributive effects of trade openness. Moreover, after testing for the differential impact of trade in middle income countries vs low income ones, we observe that the previous result only holds for middle income countries (MICs). We interpret this evidence by considering the greater potential for technological upgrading in MICs both in terms of their higher “absorptive capacity” and in terms of their superior ability in serving the differentiated and high-quality markets of the developed world.

     

    Keywords: globalization, within-country income distribution, technology transfer, developing countries, LSDVC estimator.

     

     JEL Classification: F16, O15, O33

     

     Corresponding author:

    Prof. Marco Vivarelli

    Facoltà di Economia

    Università Cattolica

    Via Emilia Parmense 84

    I 29100 Piacenza

    marco.vivarelli@unicatt.it

     

     

    CSGR, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK
    Telephone: +44 (0) 247657 5344 | Fax: +44 (0) 24 765 72548 | Email: csgr at warwick dot ac dot uk

    Close this email form
    Page contact: Leonard Seabrooke Last revised: Fri 17 Aug 2007
    • Sign in
    • |
    • Powered by Sitebuilder
    • |
    • © MMXII
    • |
    • Privacy
    • |
    • Accessibility