Außenwirtschaft und internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen

21st century regionalism: filling the gap between 21st century trade and 20th century trade rules

Which future for Switzerland's bilateral strategy towards the European Union?: a qualitative comparative analysis of agenda-setting

Public debts: nuts, bolts and worries

The governance of extractive resources

High deficits and debts: what to do about them ?

Global and local policy responses to the resource trap

The great retrenchment: international capital flows during the global financial crisis

The global and local governance of extractive resources

Chinese networks and tariff evasion

Description: 

In this paper we combine the tariff evasion analysis of Fisman and Wei (2004) with Rauch and Trindade’s (2002) study of Chinese trade networks. Chinese networks are known to act as trade catalysts by enforcing contracts and providing market information. As tariff evasion occurs outside the law, market information is scant and formal institutions inexistent, rendering networks the more important. We find robust evidence that Chinese networks, proxied by ethnic Chinese migrant populations, increase tariff evasion, i.e. the tariff semi-elasticity of Chinese missing imports. We suggest the effects takes place through matching of illicit-minded traders, identification of corrupt customs agents and enforcement of informal contracts.

The Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, and the rise of the dollar as an international currency, 1914-1939

Description: 

This paper provides new evidence on the rise of the dollar as an international currency, focusing on its role in the conduct of trade and the provision of trade credit. We show that the shift to the dollar occurred much earlier than conventionally supposed: during and immediately after World War I. Not just market forces but also policy support – the Fed in its role as market maker – was important for the dollar’s overtaking of sterling as the leading international currency. On balance, this experience challenges the popular notion of international currency status as being determined mainly by market size. It suggests that the popular image of strongly increasing returns and pervasive network externalities leaving room for only one monetary technology is misleading.

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