China's sectoral trade composition, product quality mix, and the import content of processing exports have all changed substantially during the past decade. This has rendered trade elasticities estimated using aggregate data highly unstable, with more recent data pointing to significantly higher demand and price elasticities. Sectoral differences in these parameters are also very wide. All this suggests greater caution should be exercised when using historical data to simulate the response of China's economy to external shocks and exchange rate changes. Analyses based on models with estimated coefficients largely representative of China in the 1980s and 1990s are likely to turn out to be wrong, perhaps even dramatically. © 2008 Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
CITATION STYLE
Aziz, J., & Li, X. (2008). China’s changing trade elasticities. China and World Economy, 16(3), 1–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-124X.2008.00111.x
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