The surprising instability of export specializations

A-Tier
Journal: Journal of Development Economics
Year: 2019
Volume: 137
Issue: C
Pages: 36-65

Authors (3)

Daruich, Diego (not in RePEc) Easterly, William (not in RePEc) Reshef, Ariell (Paris School of Economics)

Score contribution per author:

1.341 = (α=2.01 / 3 authors) × 2.0x A-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

We study the instability of hyper-specialization of exports at the 4-digit level in 1998–2010. (1) Specializations are surprisingly un-stable. Export ranks are not persistent, and new top products and destinations replace old ones. Measurement error is unlikely to be the main or only determinant of this pattern. (2) Source country factors are not the main explanation of this instability. Only 16–20% of variation in export growth is accounted for by source country plus source country-product factors that do not vary across destinations. The high share of idiosyncratic variance (source-product-destination residual) of 41–55%, indicates the difficulty to predict export success using source country characteristics. While we are cautious in interpreting factors that are jointly determined in global general equilibrium, our results suggest that destination and product-specific factors importantly matter at least as much as source country factors.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:deveco:v:137:y:2019:i:c:p:36-65
Journal Field
Development
Author Count
3
Added to Database
2026-01-25