Research Seminar in Economics - Jeanne Tschopp, University of Lausanne, "Estimating the Gains from Trade in Frictional Local Labor Markets"
Institute of Economics
Date: 23 October 2018 / 12:15 - 13:15
Room 408, Main building, 4th floor (access only via elevator)
We develop a theory and an empirical strategy to estimate the welfare gains of economic integration in economies with frictional local labor markets. The model yields a parsimonious generalization of the welfare formula in Arkolakis et al. (2012) that features an additional adjustment margin, via the employment rate. Moreover, the quantitative impact of this channel depends on the goods market structure and on the existence of firm heterogeneity. To obtain causal estimates of the two key structural parameters needed for the welfare analysis, the trade elasticity and the elasticity of substitution in consumption, we propose a theoretically-consistent identification strategy that exploits exogenous variation in production costs driven by differences in industrial composition across local labor markets in Germany. As an application of the theory, we exploit the unexpected fall of the Iron Curtain in 1990 to assess the quantitative importance of accounting for unemployment changes when computing the gains from trade across local labor markets in West Germany. Under monopolistic competition with free entry and firm heterogeneity, the median welfare gains in the frictional setting are 7% larger relative to the frictionless setting. The relative welfare gains are typically more modest under alternative market structures.