2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.euroecorev.2006.06.005
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Endogenous trade bloc formation in an asymmetric world

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Cited by 42 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…17 Specifically, the provision of nondiscrimination in the GATT/WTO requires that tariff concessions must be extended to 16 Ornelas (2007) and Saggi & Yildiz (2008) develop a related argument in oligopolistic models, the latter focusing on coalition-proof Nash equilibrium and the former on the core. Melatos & Woodland (2007) also adopt the core as the equilibrium concept when studying trade bloc formation.…”
Section: The Impact Of Regionalism On Multilateralismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…17 Specifically, the provision of nondiscrimination in the GATT/WTO requires that tariff concessions must be extended to 16 Ornelas (2007) and Saggi & Yildiz (2008) develop a related argument in oligopolistic models, the latter focusing on coalition-proof Nash equilibrium and the former on the core. Melatos & Woodland (2007) also adopt the core as the equilibrium concept when studying trade bloc formation.…”
Section: The Impact Of Regionalism On Multilateralismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Tharakan and Thisse (2002) examine trade between countries of different sizes, and find that small country always gains from trade while large country may not benefit from trade. Melatos and Woodland (2007, 2009) considered the formation of regional trade agreement between two asymmetric countries. In their case, countries first agree whether or not to form a regional trade agreement and then choose the optimal tariff rates they wish to levy on non‐members.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This factor plays an important role because it determines the extent of strategic delegation in a CU, which may lead to the common external tariffs being inefficiently high. In fact, if the degree of geographic specialization is very high (α close to 1), equation (26) indicates that the elected representative will be significantly more protectionist than the median voter in the CU regime, whereas no strategic delegation occurs in an FTA. This might make the FTA the equilibrium choice as shown in the upper-right region in Figure 4.…”
Section: Main Predictionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Turning to trade imbalances, our measure IM B abt is built using information on bilateral trade flows from the IMF's direction of trade database. 26 In particular, it is defined as the difference between bilateral exports in both directions between the two countries of a given country-pair, divided by the summation of the two bilateral exports for the same pair of countries. 27 This measure can range between zero, when trade is balanced, and unity (or 100 percent), when trade is unidirectional.…”
Section: Datasetmentioning
confidence: 99%