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No: ERAD-98-10
Authors:
- Jean-Marie Grether
University of Geneva and University of Neuchâtel
- Marcelo Olarreaga
The World Bank and CEPR
Manuscript date:
September 1998
Abstract Back to top
This paper quantifies the extent of preferential
trade as a share of total world trade in different regions of the world and for two
periods. Results show that: i) preferential trade represented 40% of world trade in the
period 1988-1992 and it slightly increased to 42% during the period 1993-1997; ii) during
the second period, agricultural products generally benefited more from the existence of
preferential trade agreements than industrial products (maybe due to GATT-exemption); iii)
the regional distribution of preferential trade is relatively uneven with a significant
share of preferential trade in Western Europe (around 70 per cent), relatively low values
in the Western Hemisphere (around 25 per cent), very low shares in Asia and Oceania
(around 4 per cent) and average values in the rest-of-the-world (Eastern Europe and
Africa); iv) the largest increase in shares of preferential trade between the two periods
has occurred in the Western Hemisphere and in Eastern-Europe and Africa; v) at the country
level there is an inverted-u-shape relationship between the share of preferential trade
and the size and GDP per capita of individual countries; vi) countries which are highly
open to trade tend to have a larger share of preferential trade on total trade in the
period 1993-1997, suggesting that preferential and non-preferential trade can be seen as
complements.
Keywords Back to top
International trade; preferential trade
agreements.
JEL codes: [F11]; [F12]
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