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The Economic Significance of National Border Effects

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Economic Significance of National Border Effects
Abstract
To address the economic significance of national border effects, this paper provides evidence on two fundamental questions: (1) Do large border effects arise because of high perceived-price wedges between foreign and domestic products, or because imports and domestic goods are very close substitutes?; and (2) If price wedges are important, do they reflect distortionary barriers to trade or do they arise from nondistortionary factors, such as differences in transactions costs or product characteristics? I conclude that, while border effects may imply barriers, welfare costs, and a role for policy, distortions are probably not as substantial as initial border results suggested. (JEL F1)
Publication
American Economic Review
Volume
93
Issue
4
Pages
1291-1312
Date
2003-09
Citation
Evans, C. L. (2003). The Economic Significance of National Border Effects. American Economic Review, 93, 1291–1312.
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