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Working Paper
Institutional Change and Product Composition: Does the Initial Quality of Instituions Matter?
Author(s)
We argue that the quality of institutions that enforce contracts and protect property rights influences the costs of producing high-value added (complex) versus low-value added (simple) products. Since data is hardly available for domestic transactions, we generate predictions about the relationship between the quality of institutions and product composition with an international trade model and use a rich international trade data set for empirical tests. We find that improvements in institutional quality increase the share and volume of a country's complex product exports. However, the initial quality of institutions is important, since in countries with the least developed institutions, the share of complex products in exports is generally small and, institutional reform has almost no influence on simple product exports. These findings cast doubts on the efficacy of institutional reform in countries with underdeveloped institutions.
Date Published:
2004
Citations:
Moenius, Johannes, Daniel Berkowitz. 2004. Institutional Change and Product Composition: Does the Initial Quality of Instituions Matter?.