论文标题
地缘政治冲突对贸易,增长和创新的影响
The Impact of Geopolitical Conflicts on Trade, Growth, and Innovation
论文作者
论文摘要
地缘政治冲突越来越成为贸易政策的驱动力。我们研究了全球和持续的地缘政治冲突对贸易,技术创新和经济增长的潜在影响。在常规贸易模型中,此类冲突的福利成本是适中的。我们建立了一个多区域的多区域一般平衡模型,具有动态部门特定的知识扩散,这扩大了贸易冲突的福利损失。想法扩散是由生产的投入输出结构介导的,因此,部门的成本和进口贸易股份都代表了思想的来源分布。使用此框架,我们探讨了“全球经济的解耦”的潜在影响,这是一种假设的情况,在该假设方面,技术系统在全球经济中会差异。我们将全球经济分为两个地缘政治集团 - 东部和西部 - 基于外交政策的相似性和模型通过增加冰山贸易成本(全部解耦)或关税(关税解耦)的模型。结果产生三个主要见解。首先,预计的全球经济经济损失是脱钩方案的巨大损失,在某些地区,最大的15%,在低收入地区最大,因为它们从富裕地区的技术溢出中受益匪浅。其次,描述的福利效应的规模和模式是特定于模型的特定思想的扩散。如果不扩散思想,福利损失地区之间的规模和变化将大大较小。第三,一个多部门框架加剧了相对于单扇区的扩散效率的扩散效率低下。
Geopolitical conflicts have increasingly been a driver of trade policy. We study the potential effects of global and persistent geopolitical conflicts on trade, technological innovation, and economic growth. In conventional trade models the welfare costs of such conflicts are modest. We build a multi-sector multi-region general equilibrium model with dynamic sector-specific knowledge diffusion, which magnifies welfare losses of trade conflicts. Idea diffusion is mediated by the input-output structure of production, such that both sector cost shares and import trade shares characterize the source distribution of ideas. Using this framework, we explore the potential impact of a "decoupling of the global economy," a hypothetical scenario under which technology systems would diverge in the global economy. We divide the global economy into two geopolitical blocs -- East and West -- based on foreign policy similarity and model decoupling through an increase in iceberg trade costs (full decoupling) or tariffs (tariff decoupling). Results yield three main insights. First, the projected welfare losses for the global economy of a decoupling scenario can be drastic, as large as 15% in some regions and are largest in the lower income regions as they would benefit less from technology spillovers from richer areas. Second, the described size and pattern of welfare effects are specific to the model with diffusion of ideas. Without diffusion of ideas the size and variation across regions of the welfare losses would be substantially smaller. Third, a multi-sector framework exacerbates diffusion inefficiencies induced by trade costs relative to a single-sector one.