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Imported Intermediate Inputs and Domestic Product Growth: Evidence from India

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Author Info
Pinelopi Goldberg (Princeton University)
Amit Khandelwal (Columbia GSB)
Nina Pavcnik (Dartmouth College)
Petia Topalova (IMF)
Abstract

New goods play a central role in many trade and growth models. We use detailed trade and firm-level data from a large developing economy - India - to investigate the relationship between declines in trade costs, the imports of intermediate inputs and domestic firm product scope. We estimate substantial static gains from trade through access to new imported inputs. Accounting for new imported varieties lowers the import price index for intermediate goods on average by an additional 4.7 percent per year relative to conventional gains through lower prices of existing imports. Moreover, we find that lower input tariffs account on average for 31 percent of the new products introduced by domestic firms, which implies potentially large dynamic gains from trade. This expansion in firms' product scope is driven to a large extent by international trade increasing access of firms to new input varieties rather than by simply making existing imported inputs cheaper. Hence, our findings suggest that an important consequence of the input tariff liberalization was to relax technological constraints through firms’ access to new imported inputs that were unavailable prior to the liberalization.

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Paper provided by Princeton University, Department of Economics, Center for Economic Policy Studies. in its series Working Papers with number 1179.

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Date of creation: Sep 2009
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Handle: RePEc:pri:cepsud:1179

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Related research
Keywords: Intermediate Inputs; Firm Scope; Multi-product Firms; Product Growth; Gains from Variety; Endogenous Growth; Trade Liberalization; India;

Find related papers by JEL classification:
C01 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods - - General - - - Econometrics
E20 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Macroeconomics: Consumption, Saving, Production, Employment, and Investment - - - General (includes Measurement and Data)
E37 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles - - - Forecasting and Simulation
F14 - International Economics - - Trade - - - Country and Industry Studies of Trade
L10 - Industrial Organization - - Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance - - - General

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This page was last updated on 2009-11-19.


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