Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries

In recent decades, economists seek to find the answers of two very fundamental questions “why has global trade grown, and what are the consequences of that growth?”. Two answers that come to mind immediately are trade liberalisation and falling transportation costs. Another possible explanation is t...

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Main Author: Kadir KARAGÖZ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: General Association of Economists from Romania 2016-12-01
Series:Theoretical and Applied Economics
Subjects:
Online Access: http://store.ectap.ro/articole/1228.pdf
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spelling doaj-bfb833fdf11a4f70915d4ce20276093c2020-11-24T23:52:16ZengGeneral Association of Economists from RomaniaTheoretical and Applied Economics1841-86781844-00292016-12-01XXIII412714218418678Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countriesKadir KARAGÖZ0 Celal Bayar University of Manisa, Turkey In recent decades, economists seek to find the answers of two very fundamental questions “why has global trade grown, and what are the consequences of that growth?”. Two answers that come to mind immediately are trade liberalisation and falling transportation costs. Another possible explanation is that trade has grown because economies have converged in economic size. A fourth source may be increased outsourcing. And as another factor the international movement of people may play a significant role on international trade. The declining cost of travel and communications has lowered information barriers and encouraged migration across national borders. The current paper aims at testing the impact of migration on bilateral trade in an augmented panel gravity model framework. To this end the relationship between Turkish emigrant stock in the 13 OECD countries and bilateral trade volume (imports and exports) for the years 2000-2012 was analysed. Economic size and geographical distance between trading partners were controlled. Empirical results show that there is a significant impact of migration on bilateral trade both in terms of imports and exports. On the other hand, as expected, economic size and distance have positive and negative effect respectively on trade. http://store.ectap.ro/articole/1228.pdf MigrationtradeTurkeyOECD countriespanel gravity model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kadir KARAGÖZ
spellingShingle Kadir KARAGÖZ
Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries
Theoretical and Applied Economics
Migration
trade
Turkey
OECD countries
panel gravity model
author_facet Kadir KARAGÖZ
author_sort Kadir KARAGÖZ
title Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries
title_short Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries
title_full Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries
title_fullStr Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries
title_full_unstemmed Migration – trade nexus revisited: Empirical evidence from Turkish emigrants in OECD countries
title_sort migration – trade nexus revisited: empirical evidence from turkish emigrants in oecd countries
publisher General Association of Economists from Romania
series Theoretical and Applied Economics
issn 1841-8678
1844-0029
publishDate 2016-12-01
description In recent decades, economists seek to find the answers of two very fundamental questions “why has global trade grown, and what are the consequences of that growth?”. Two answers that come to mind immediately are trade liberalisation and falling transportation costs. Another possible explanation is that trade has grown because economies have converged in economic size. A fourth source may be increased outsourcing. And as another factor the international movement of people may play a significant role on international trade. The declining cost of travel and communications has lowered information barriers and encouraged migration across national borders. The current paper aims at testing the impact of migration on bilateral trade in an augmented panel gravity model framework. To this end the relationship between Turkish emigrant stock in the 13 OECD countries and bilateral trade volume (imports and exports) for the years 2000-2012 was analysed. Economic size and geographical distance between trading partners were controlled. Empirical results show that there is a significant impact of migration on bilateral trade both in terms of imports and exports. On the other hand, as expected, economic size and distance have positive and negative effect respectively on trade.
topic Migration
trade
Turkey
OECD countries
panel gravity model
url http://store.ectap.ro/articole/1228.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT kadirkaragoz migrationtradenexusrevisitedempiricalevidencefromturkishemigrantsinoecdcountries
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