Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Abstract One of the puzzles of the gravity literature is the persistent effect of distance on trade flows, despite the dramatic fall in trade costs during the last few decades (Disdier and Head in Rev Econ Stat 90(1):37–48, 2008). A possible reason for the “distance puzzle” is that trade in intermediate goods—which has risen dramatically during this period due to the emergence of global value chains—may be more sensitive to distance than trade in final goods. Using a dataset of bilateral import flows that covers 5000 products and more than 200 countries over the 1998–2011 period, we show that intermediate goods are indeed more sensitive to distance than are final goods and that differentiated inputs exhibit the highest distance elasticity. The results are robust to including different sets of controls, and using different samples and econometric methodologies. They suggest that sourcing inputs from nearby countries helps final good producers to coordinate with their suppliers, monitor their production, and ensure the timely delivery of inputs that need to be tailored to their needs.