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Original Articles

The J-curve: evidence from commodity trade between US and China

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Pages 2735-2747 | Published online: 11 Apr 2011
 

Abstract

In testing the short-run (J-curve effect) and the long-run effects of currency depreciation on the trade balance many researchers have used either trade data between one country and the rest of the world or between one country and another trading partner. Both groups are said to suffer from aggregation bias. To reduce the bias, in this article we consider trade data between one country (the US) and her trading partner (China) disaggregated by commodity. We use imports and exports of 88 industries (2-digit and 3-digit classifications) and cointegration analysis to show that the trade balance of at least 34 of the industries react favourably to real depreciation of the dollar. The J-curve effect is detected in 22 industries. Furthermore, most of these industries that are sensitive to currency depreciation are durable commodity groupings.

Acknowledgements

Valuable comments of an anonymous referee are greatly appreciated.

Notes

1Other studies that have used aggregate trade data to address different issues related to the trade balance are Briguglio (Citation1989), Tegene (Citation1991), Vamvoukas (Citation1999), Miljkovic et al. (Citation2000), Bahmani-Oskooee (Citation2001), Dar and Amirkhalkhali (Citation2003), Dutta and Ahmed (Citation2004) and Berument and Dincer (Citation2005).

2See Rose and Yellen (Citation1989, p. 58).

3Marwah and Klein (Citation1996), Rahman et al . (Citation1997), Bahmani-Oskooee and Brooks (Citation1999) and Kyereme (Citation2002) are examples of other studies that used bilateral data.

4For an anlysis of the impact of value-added tax on trade at commodity level see Rousslang and Van Leeuwen (Citation1990) and for the impact of antidumping policies on the trade balance see Mah (Citation2000).

5Unlike other four studies in the group, Brada et al . (Citation1993) who used Johansen's cointegration technique showed that there is at most one cointegrating vector among the trade balance, real effective exchange rate, and income variables. However, following Cheung and Lai (Citation1993), when their trace and λ-max statistics are adjusted, cointegration disappears.

6Another body of the literature aims at estimating import and export demand functions separately. Examples include King (Citation1993), Alse and Bahmani-Oskooee (Citation1995), Charos et al . (Citation1996), Truett and Truett (Citation2000), Du and Zhu (Citation2001), Love and Chandra (Citation2005), Agbola and Damoense (Citation2005) and Narayan and Narayan (Citation2005).

7Normalization is done by dividing estimate of λ 4 by −λ 1. The same is true of other long-run estimates.

8For the list of industries see .

9Two lags are imposed due to limited number of observations, i.e., 25. Note that Hakkio and Rush (Citation1991) have argued that cointegration is a long-run concept and requires long spans of data rather than a large number of observations. Thus, 25 annual observations are as good as 100 quarterly ones.

10These industries are coded in or 3 as: 21, 61, 611, 64, 642, 65, 651, 656, 75, 751, 76, 77, 772, 774, 775, 778, 87, 874, 88, 881, 885 and 893.

11To provide additional and strong support for cointegration, we use estimates of λ 1 − λ 4 and form an error-correction term EC. We then replace the linear combination of the lagged level variables by the lagged EC and estimate model (4) after imposing the optimum lags. A negative and significant coefficient obtained for ECt −1 will support cointegration. These results are also reported in and they do indicate that cointegration is supported in all but four cases.

12More precisely, the dummy was positive and significant in industries numbered 05, 057, 51, 515, 516, 54, 551, 656 and 897. It was negative and significant in industries 21, 641, 642, 663, 692, 74, 764, 893 and 894.

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