Quality Upgrading and Import Competition in a Third Market: Evidence from Exports to the US of Asian Developing Countries
This paper studies how Asian developing countries responded to the rise of China in the US market using product-level bilateral trade data from BACI-CEPII dataset for the period from 1995 to 2015. In particular, the paper investigates the effect of increasing import competition from China on qual...
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Format: | Conference or Workshop Item |
Language: | English |
Published: |
H. : ĐHKT
2020
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Online Access: | http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/70548 |
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Institution: | Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
Language: | English |
Summary: | This paper studies how Asian developing countries responded to the rise of China in the US
market using product-level bilateral trade data from BACI-CEPII dataset for the period from 1995 to
2015. In particular, the paper investigates the effect of increasing import competition from China on
quality upgrading of exporting products from Asian developing countries. In contrast to previous
approaches that use unit values as proxies for quality, I estimate quality at the product level for
bilateral import data in the US using both prices and quantity information following the method
proposed by Khandelwal (2010). I base the empirical framework on the gravity model to investigate
the impact of the competition from China on exports of other Asian developing countries. Apart from
traditional variables in a gravity equation to control for observables, I include China’s share in the US
market at HS6 product level as a measure of Chinese competition. I follow Autor et al. (2013a) to
identify the impact of trade shocks emanating from China by exploiting exogenous intensification of
Chinese exports to other developed countries at product-year level. The results show robust evidence
that Chinese competition leads to an increase in export values and export quantities in Bangladesh
and Vietnam but a decrease in export values and export quantities in Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia,
Nepal, Philippines and Thailand. On the other hand, all Asian developing countries except for Laos
respond to the rising competition from China by upgrading product quality. The analysis also looks
at heterogeneity in the response by taking into account differences in the intensity of the competition
from China, countries’ comparative advantage, the distance to the world quality frontier and the long
and short of the quality ladder. Countries further upgrade quality of products close to the frontier or
short-ladder products. |
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