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Commodity Price Volatility and World Market Integration since 1700 Author info | Abstract | Publisher info | Download info | Related research | Statistics David S. Jacks, Kevin H. O'Rourke and Jeffrey G. Williamson
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Poor countries are more volatile than rich countries, and we know this volatility impedes their growth. We also know that commodity price volatility is a key source of those shocks. This paper explores commodity and manufactures price over the past three centuries to answer three questions: Has commodity price volatility increased over time? The answer is no: there is little evidence of trend since 1700. Have commodities always shown greater price volatility than manufactures? The answer is yes. Higher commodity price volatility is not the modern product of asymmetric industrial organizations – oligopolistic manufacturing versus competitive commodity markets – that only appeared with the industrial revolution. It was a fact of life deep into the 18th century. Does world market integration breed more or less commodity price volatility? The answer is less. Three centuries of history shows unambiguously that economic isolation caused by war or autarkic policy has been associated with much greater commodity price volatility, while world market integration associated with peace and pro-global policy has been associated with less commodity price volatility. Given specialization and comparative advantage, globalization has been good for growth in poor countries at least by diminishing price volatility. But comparative advantage has never been constant. Globalization increased poor country specialization in commodities when the world went open after the early 19th century; but it did not do so after the 1970s as the Third World shifted to labor-intensive manufactures. Whether price volatility or specialization dominates terms of trade and thus aggregate volatility in poor countries is thus conditional on the century.
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Paper David S. Jacks & Kevin H. O'Rourke & Jeffrey G. Williamson, 2009.
"Commodity Price Volatility and World Market Integration since 1700 ,"
NBER Working Papers
14748, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
[Downloadable!] (restricted) David S. Jacks, Kevin H. O'Rourke and Jeffrey G. Williamson, 2009.
"Commodity Price Volatility and World Market Integration since 1700 ,"
The Institute for International Integration Studies Discussion Paper Series
iiisdp284, IIIS.
[Downloadable!] Jacks, David S. & O'Rourke, Kevin H & Williamson, Jeffrey G, 2009.
"Commodity Price Volatility and World Market Integration since 1700 ,"
CEPR Discussion Papers
7190, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers.
[Downloadable!] (restricted) This paper has been announced in the following NEP Reports :
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