1996

Résumé

How do information frictions distort international trade? This paper exploits a unique historical experiment to estimate the magnitude of these distortions: the establishment of the transatlantic telegraph connection in 1866. I use a newly collected data set based on historical newspaper records that provides daily data on information flows across the Atlantic together with detailed, daily information on prices and trade flows of cotton. Information frictions result in large and volatile deviations from the Law of One Price. What is more, the elimination of information frictions has real effects: Exports respond to information about foreign demand shocks. Average trade flows increase after the telegraph and become more volatile, providing a more efficient response to demand shocks. I build a model of international trade that can explain the empirical evidence. In the model, exporters use the latest news about a foreign market to forecast expected selling prices when their exports arrive at the destination Their forecast error is smaller and less volatile the more recent the available information. I estimate the welfare gains from information transmission through the telegraph to be roughly equivalent to those from abolishing a 6% ad valorem tariff.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/papers/25189808/167
2014-09-16
2024-11-24
http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/papers/25189808/167
Loading
  • Published online: 16 Sept 2014
Ceci est un champ obligatoire
S'il vous plaît, mettez une adresse courriel valide
Approbation avec succès
Donnée invalide
Une erreur s'est produite
L'approbation a été partiellement réussie, les éléments sélectionnés suivants n'ont pas pu être traités en raison d'une erreur
aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cud3RvLWlsaWJyYXJ5Lm9yZy8K