Intermediated Trade

Citation:

Antràs, Pol, and Arnaud Costinot. 2011. “Intermediated Trade.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 126 (3): 1319-1374.
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Abstract:

This paper develops a simple model of international trade with intermediation. We consider an economy with two islands and two types of agents, farmers and traders. Farmers can produce two goods, but to sell these goods in centralized (Walrasian) markets, they need to be matched with a trader, and this entails costly search. In the absence of search frictions, our model reduces to a standard Ricardian model of trade. We use this simple model to contrast the implications of changes in the integration of Walrasian markets, which allow traders from different islands to exchange their goods, and changes in the access to these Walrasian markets, which allow farmers to trade with traders from different islands. We find that intermediation always magnifies the gains from trade under the former type of integration, but leads to more nuanced welfare results under the latter, including the possibility of aggregate losses.

Notes:

Published versions have been posted with the written permission of the journals where they appeared. Standard copyright rules apply. Please download and print for personal use only. Arnaud Costinot's website

DOI:10.1093/qje/qjr019

PDF: http://qje.oxfordjournals.org/content/126/3/1319.full.pdf+html
Last updated on 03/21/2013