Trade effects of the New Silk Road: A gravity analysis

This paper takes a first look at the trade effects of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, also referred to as the New Silk Road, on the 71 countries potentially involved. The initiative consists of several infrastructure investment projects to improve the land and maritime transportation in the Belt a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of development economics Vol. 146; p. 102467
Main Authors: Baniya, Suprabha, Rocha, Nadia, Ruta, Michele
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-09-2020
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Summary:This paper takes a first look at the trade effects of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, also referred to as the New Silk Road, on the 71 countries potentially involved. The initiative consists of several infrastructure investment projects to improve the land and maritime transportation in the Belt and Road Initiative region. The analysis first uses geo-referenced data and geographical information system analysis to compute the bilateral time to trade before and after the Belt and Road Initiative. Then, it estimates the effect of improvements in bilateral time to trade on bilateral export values and trade patterns, using a gravity model and a comparative advantage model. Finally, the analysis combines the estimates from the regression analysis with the results of the geographical information system analysis to quantify the potential trade effects of the Belt and Road Initiative. The paper finds that (i) the Belt and Road Initiative increases trade flows among participating countries by up to 4.1 percent; (ii) these effects would be three times as large on average if trade reforms complemented the upgrading in transport infrastructure; and (iii) products that use time sensitive inputs and countries that are highly exposed to the new infrastructure and integrated in global value chains have larger trade gains. •The Belt and Road Initiative increases trade flows among participating countries by up to 4.1 percent.•Improved trading times can increase trade more in time-sensitive sectors and in sectors that use time sensitive inputs.•Countries highly exposed to the new infrastructure and integrated in global value chains have larger trade gains from the BRI.
ISSN:0304-3878
1872-6089
DOI:10.1016/j.jdeveco.2020.102467