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Understanding Cross-country Differences in Exporter Premia: Comparable Evidence for 14 Countries

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 18:38 authored by Fryges, HR
We use comparable micro level panel data for 14 countries and a set of identically specified empirical models to investigate the relationship between exports and productivity. Our overall results are in line with the big picture that is by now familiar from the literature: exporters are more productive than non exporters when observed and unobserved heterogeneity is controlled for, and these exporter productivity premia tend to increase with the share of exports in total sales; there is evidence in favour of self-selection of more productive firms into export markets, but nearly no evidence in favour of the learning-by-exporting hypothesis. We document that the exporter premia differ considerably across countries in identically specified empirical models. In a meta-analysis of our results we find, consistent with theoretical predictions, that productivity premia are larger in countries with lower export participation rates, with more restrictive trade policies,lower per capita GDP, less effective government and worse regulatory quality, and in countries exporting to relatively more distant markets.

History

Publication title

Review of World Economics

Volume

144

Issue

4

Pagination

596-635

ISSN

1610-2878

Department/School

TSBE

Publisher

Springer

Place of publication

the Netherlands

Rights statement

Copyright 2008 Kiel Institute

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Microeconomics not elsewhere classified

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