Regional and Sectoral Patterns and Determinants of Comparative Advantage in China

William Charles Sawyer, Kiril Tochkov, Wenting Yu

Author information




a Department of Economics, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas 76129, USA

b Department of Economics, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas 76129, USA

c Tepper School of Business, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA

E-mail: w.c.sawyer@tcu.edu (William Charles Sawye), k.tochkov@tcu.edu (Kiril Tochkov) , wyu1@andrew.cmu.edu (Wenting Yu)

Abstract




China’s export performance is marked by large regional disparities which affect trade patterns at the national level. This paper uses data from input-output tables to estimate the comparative advantage of Chinese provinces in the three main economic sectors over the period 1992–2007. In contrast to existing studies, we include the services sector in the analysis and construct not only indices of revealed comparative advantage for overall trade, but also bilateral indices for interprovincial trade. The results indicate that West and Central China have a comparative advantage in agriculture/mining, coastal provinces in manufacturing, and metropolitan provinces in services. However, interprovincial trade exhibits a more complex pattern. Regression analysis identifies labor endowments as the key determinant of comparative advantage in total trade, while physical capital is the driving force in domestic trade. Human capital and government spending have a positive effect, whereas industrial loans and taxes, along with provincial trade barriers, impair comparative advantage.

Keywords




comparative advantage, trade, sectors, regional disparities, China

Cite this article




William Charles Sawyer, Kiril Tochkov, Wenting Yu. Regional and Sectoral Patterns and Determinants of Comparative Advantage in China. Front. Econ. China, 2017, 12(1): 7‒36 https://doi.org/10.3868/s060-006-017-0002-6


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