International competition in the first wave of globalization: new evidence on the margins of trade
Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteurs/contributeurs
- Betrán, Concepción (Auteur)
- Huberman, Michael (Auteur)
Titre
International competition in the first wave of globalization: new evidence on the margins of trade
Résumé
We pose a seemingly ageless question in economic history. To what extent did new entrants in the late nineteenth-century cotton-textile industry threaten the customary markets of the European core? Exploiting a newly constructed dataset on textile imports to Spain, we find that as trade costs fell, new rivals began to sell a greater variety of products. Along this dimension, competition can be said to have increased. In response, producers in Europe adjusted the type and number of goods exported. By 1914, specialization mapped onto endowments of skilled labour, capital, and access to raw materials. While firms in new industrializing countries exported low-end varieties, incumbents in the core shipped high-end goods, unit values increasing with levels of development.
Publication
The Economic History Review
Volume
69
Numéro
1
Pages
258-287
Date
2016
Langue
Anglais
ISSN
1468-0289
Titre abrégé
International competition in the first wave of globalization
Consulté le
19/01/2024 15:52
Catalogue de bibl.
Wiley Online Library
Autorisations
© Economic History Society 2015
Extra
Référence
Betrán, Concepción, et Michael Huberman. « International competition in the first wave of globalization: new evidence on the margins of trade ». The Economic History Review 69, no 1 (2016) : 258‑87. https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.12115.
Années
Professeur.e.s honoraires et émérites
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