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Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.) WIOD Conference, 26-28 May 2010, Vienna
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Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services

Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD)and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

WIOD Conference, 26-28 May 2010, Vienna

Page 2: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Why focusing on trade costs in services?

Services represent two-thirds of economic activity but trade in services is less than 5% of GDP (as opposed to 20% for goods).

Services are less “non-tradable” than in the past.

Trade costs should explain why services are less traded.

Definition of trade costs: the full range of costs a firm confronts when it decides to sell its services overseas.

Page 3: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Quantification of barriers to trade in services: top-down versus bottom-up approach

Page 4: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

A theory-consistent measure of trade costs (Novy, 2009) Based on the standard Anderson and Van

Wincoop (2003) gravity model. Trade costs are calculated as the geometric

average of bilateral trade costs for exports from country i to country j and from country j to country i, expressed relative to domestic trade costs in each country.

The equation below presents this measure in ad valorem equivalent terms:

1.

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.

.1

.

. 2

1

)1(2

1

2

1

jiij

jjii

jiij

jjii

jjii

jiijij xx

xx

xx

xx

tt

tt

Page 5: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Trade costs in services, 1995-2007 We construct Novy (2009) measures of trade

costs in services for up to 61 countries and 12 services industries. We also compile data for 17 goods sectors as a point of comparison.

In all calculations, the elasticity of substitution sigma is set equal to 8 (equivalent to gamma = 7, a reasonable assumption for firm-level heterogeneity).

Data sources: Intranational trade flows (domestic output minus

exports): EU Klems, OECD Stan and OECD I/O tables, complemented with national data.

Bilateral trade flows: OECD ITCS (goods) and TISP (services) database.

Page 6: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Comparison of trade costs in goods and services

USA vis-à-vis major partners (2000, per cent ad valorem equivalent)

Page 7: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

World aggregate trade costs indices, 1995-2007 (1995=100)

Page 8: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

China trade costs indices, 1995-2005 (1995=100)

Page 9: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Trade costs indices for selected services industries

Page 10: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Trade costs and regional trade agreements

Overall trade costs Services industries

Trade costs within and outside services RTAs

Page 11: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Trade costs and RTAs: regression results

Page 12: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Trade costs and productivity

Page 13: Measuring the Cost of International Trade in Services Sébastien Miroudot (OECD), Jehan Sauvage (OECD) and Ben Shepherd (Developing Trade Consultants Ltd.)

Concluding remarks Strong evidence that trade costs in services are

much higher than in goods: two or three times higher.

Trade costs in services have remained stable over the last decade. Lack of services trade liberalization? China’s experience and results for RTAs suggest that

trade policies can reduce trade costs. Services sectors facing lower trade costs tend to

be more productive and have higher productivity growth.

Next steps: Expand the dataset Decompose overall trade costs into those amenable to

policy action and those “non-compressible”. Distinguish between fixed and variable trade costs.