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REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

REGIONAL COOPERATION AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION

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their mass and inversely proportional to the distance which separates them. In its basic<br />

form, the gravity model states that foreign trade between two countries is a positive<br />

function of their GDP as a proxy variable for their respective supply (conditions in the<br />

source country) and demand (conditions in the host country), and a negative function of<br />

the distance between two countries as a proxy variable for transportation costs. Thus the<br />

basic model has following form:<br />

(1)<br />

If the basic explanatory variables of the gravity equation are distance and economic size,<br />

then theory allows the inclusion of many variables that may explain trade flows between<br />

two observed countries, such as GDP per capita, foreign direct investment, exchange<br />

rate volatility as well as dummies for similar languages, common border and free trade<br />

agreements. The gravity model has gained theoretical foundations due to the development<br />

of new theories of international trade, which assume imperfect competition. Helpman and<br />

Krugman (1985) propose a formalization of the gravity equation in which intra and interindustry<br />

trade approaches are reconsidered. The Bergstrand (1989) model represents an<br />

extension of the Helpman and Krugman model, taking into account the supply and demand<br />

functions of trade flows.<br />

1.2. Literature overview<br />

SOME ASPECTS OF TRADE STATISTICS <strong>AND</strong> REPORTING<br />

Empirical studies consistently identify GDP per capita differences and size differences<br />

between sending and receiving countries as key drivers of migration between nations, and<br />

indicate that economic theory does not provide a fully satisfactory model for analysing the<br />

causes and effects of migration. This discrepancy between empirical studies and theory has<br />

led to the coexistence of several interdisciplinary approaches which are presented in more<br />

detail in Hatton and Williamson’s (2005) work. For instance the so-called macroeconomic<br />

theories in the neo-classical tradition explain migration by looking at skill differences in<br />

the labour supply and demand between two observed countries as well as the differences<br />

in their wages, while microeconomic theories try to explain the migration incentives of<br />

the individuals involved through cost-benefit deliberations based on lifecycle income and<br />

taking into account investment in human capital. 6<br />

The so-called world dual labour theory explains international migration by means of<br />

push and pull factors, where the pull factors represent the following four characteristics<br />

of modern industrial society: structural wage inflation, lack of motivation for lowstatus<br />

jobs, economic dualism between a human capital-intensive core workforce and<br />

a peripheral workforce, and demographic trends in labour supply. Similarly, other new<br />

theories assume that the decision to migrate is taken on the family level rather than by<br />

individuals. The objective of migration is the collective maximization of the income in<br />

absolute and relative terms in comparison with reference families or neighbours as well<br />

as risk minimization under conditions of undeveloped insurance markets.<br />

Thus Hatton and Williamson’s book presents a synthesis of the theoretical models, and at<br />

the same time shows the non-linearity of the relationships between the stage of development<br />

6<br />

See for instance Andersen (2005)<br />

205

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