Gravity Models and Empirical Trade

Book Title: 
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance
Editor(s): 
Publication Year: 
2019
Publication Place: 
Oxford
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
DOI: 
10.1093/acrefore/9780190625979.013.327
Volume: 
Economics And Finance
ISBN: 
9780190625979
Pages: 
48
Abstract: 

The gravity model of international trade states that the volume of trade between two countries is proportional to their economic mass and a measure of their relative trade frictions. Perhaps because of its intuitive appeal, the gravity model has been the workhorse model of international trade for more than 50 years. While the initial empirical work using the gravity model lacked sound theoretical underpinnings, the theoretical developments have highlighted how a gravity-like specification can be derived from many models with varying assumptions about preferences, technology, and market structure. Along the strengthening of the theoretical roots of the gravity model, the way in which it is estimated has also evolved significantly since the start of the new millennium. Depending on the exact characteristics of regression, different estimation methods should be used to estimate the gravity model.

Keywords: 
international trade, bilateral trade, the gravity equation, structural gravity, trade costs, new trade theory, heterogeneous firms