The Granular Trade and Production Activities (GRANTPA) Database
By: Bradley, Sebastien.
Contributor(s): Larch, Mario | Flórez Mendoza, Javier | Yotov, Yoto V.
Material type: BookSeries: wiiw Working Papers: 248Publisher: Wien : Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw), 2024Description: 34 S., 3 Tables and 7 Figures, 30cm.Subject(s): Gravity Data | Structural Gravity | Domestic Trade Flows | Disaggregated Gravity Estimates | Home Bias EstimatesCountries covered: European Union | Iceland | Montenegro | North Macedonia | Norway | Serbia | Turkey | United Kindomwiiw Research Areas: International Trade, Competitiveness and FDIClassification: C81 | F13 | F14 Online resources: Click here to access online Summary: This paper introduces the Granular Trade and Production Activities (GRANTPA) database, which covers international trade flows for 3,124 products and 247 countries over the period 1995-2019 as well as domestic trade flows and production data for the same number of products and years for a subset of 35 European economies. The original data sources that we employ are Eurostat’s Comext and Prodcom databases. A gravity application delivers a large set of product-level ‘home bias’ estimates, which cannot be obtained without domestic trade flows. The average estimates on the standard gravity variables in our model (e.g., distance) are comparable to those from the related literature. However, our disaggregated estimates are very heterogeneous across products, thus highlighting the importance of our new database.Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Paper | WIIW Library | 5.700/248 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 1000010006911 |
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This paper introduces the Granular Trade and Production Activities (GRANTPA) database, which covers international trade flows for 3,124 products and 247 countries over the period 1995-2019 as well as domestic trade flows and production data for the same number of products and years for a subset of 35 European economies. The original data sources that we employ are Eurostat’s Comext and Prodcom databases. A gravity application delivers a large set of product-level ‘home bias’ estimates, which cannot be obtained without domestic trade flows. The average estimates on the standard gravity variables in our model (e.g., distance) are comparable to those from the related literature. However, our disaggregated estimates are very heterogeneous across products, thus highlighting the importance of our new database.