African Regional Agreements: Their Impact on Trade With or Without Currency Unions
Celine Carrere
No 200311, Working Papers from CERDI
Abstract:
The aim of this paper is (i) to assess the impact of regional agreements on members’ trade in Sub-Saharan Africa (intra-regional trade as well as trade with the rest of the world), controlling for the other traditional determinants, including geography and transport costs and (ii) to compare the respective effect of the preferential trade agreements and the monetary unions. Considering the period 1962-1996, we first assess the average impact of each regional agreement on their implementation period and second we show how these impacts have evolved. An “augmented” gravity model is designed, relying on a transport cost function, in which specific dummies allow trade creation and trade diversion effects to be separated. The model is estimated in panel with bilateral specific effects, to isolate the non-observable characteristics of each pair of countries, and according to the Hausman-Taylor (1981) method, which takes into account a possible endogeneity of some explanatory variables. During their implementation, the African regional trade agreements have generated a significant increase in trade between members, although initially often through trade diversion. In the two agreements of the CFA franc zone, the currency unions have largely reinforced the positive effect of the corresponding preferential trade agreements on intra-regional trade, while dampening their trade diversion effect. Actually, currency unions rather had a trade creation effect (all the more important as the international monetary environment has been more unstable), whereas preferential trade agreements resulted in important trade diversion.
Keywords: Sub-Saharan Africa; Regional Agreements; Currency union; Gravity equation; Panel data (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 40
Date: 2003
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)
Published in Journal of African Economies, 2004, pages 199-239
Published in Journal of African Economies
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cdi:wpaper:424
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