Dispersion in macroeconomic volatility between the core and periphery of the international trade network
Abstract
At the country level, macroeconomic volatility tends to correlate with trade openness although
the direction of correlation is not stable across samples. Higher openness allows
for greater diversification opportunities, but provides lesser immunity from outside shocks.
Here I consider trade network as a composite of all pairwise trade linkages to emphasize
that different linkages contribute differently to the transmission or mitigation of shocks,
and show that volatility is inversely related to centrality, a summary measure of strength
of the linkages specific to a country. I study a dynamic multi-country, multi-sector model
subject to idiosyncratic liquidity shocks, and characterize volatility as an explicit function
of centrality, diversification and the Herfindahl of the trade network in equilibrium.
With sufficient skewness in the trade linkages across countries, similar shocks generate
substantially different levels of repercussions across the network. The conventional effect
of diversification holds true that countries with better diversified trade portfolio fluctuate
less. Centrality directly contributes to higher resilience to exogenous shocks, thus reducing
volatility. Combined effect of these two mechanisms dominates the opposite effect
that a more central country is also more exposed to shocks, which increases volatility.
The model calibrated to the EU generates and closely replicates the negative relationship
between centrality and volatility. The theoretical model is then extended to capture preference
shocks and sparseness of the trade networks.
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