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Long-term Specialization and Trade Flow Patterns of Heavy Industrial and Light Industrial Goods: A Comparative Analysis of Anglophone and Nordic countries

Luginsland, Annika LU (2018) EKHS12 20181
Department of Economic History
Abstract (Swedish)
Recent studies focusing on the analysis of emissions embodied in trade have shown that high-income countries are increasingly becoming net importers of emissions. This is commonly explained by the economies’ changing trade specialization in heavy and light industrial goods. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate and compare the trade specialization patterns of twelve Anglophone and Nordic countries between 1962 and 2016 by using two trade specialization indicators: the normalized trade balance and the revealed symmetric comparative advantage (RSCA) index. The results do not support the claim that the Anglophone or Nordic countries have increasingly specialized in the export of light industrial or the import of heavy industrial... (More)
Recent studies focusing on the analysis of emissions embodied in trade have shown that high-income countries are increasingly becoming net importers of emissions. This is commonly explained by the economies’ changing trade specialization in heavy and light industrial goods. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate and compare the trade specialization patterns of twelve Anglophone and Nordic countries between 1962 and 2016 by using two trade specialization indicators: the normalized trade balance and the revealed symmetric comparative advantage (RSCA) index. The results do not support the claim that the Anglophone or Nordic countries have increasingly specialized in the export of light industrial or the import of heavy industrial goods. Instead, it has rather been found that natural resources, such as wood or basic metals, have been very trade-determinant factors throughout the entire period. Overall, the results suggest that other reasons than a changing trade structure must be responsible for the increasing emissions embodied in imports. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Luginsland, Annika LU
supervisor
organization
course
EKHS12 20181
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Trade Specialization, CO2 emissions, Heavy and Light Industry, Economic Development, Natural Resources
language
English
id
8950111
date added to LUP
2018-06-21 13:34:30
date last changed
2018-06-21 13:34:30
@misc{8950111,
  abstract     = {{Recent studies focusing on the analysis of emissions embodied in trade have shown that high-income countries are increasingly becoming net importers of emissions. This is commonly explained by the economies’ changing trade specialization in heavy and light industrial goods. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate and compare the trade specialization patterns of twelve Anglophone and Nordic countries between 1962 and	2016 by using two trade specialization indicators: the normalized trade balance and the revealed symmetric comparative advantage (RSCA) index. The results do not support 	the claim that the Anglophone or Nordic countries have increasingly specialized in the export of light industrial or the import of heavy industrial goods. Instead, it has rather been found that natural resources, such as wood or basic metals, have been very trade-determinant factors throughout the entire period. Overall, the results suggest that other reasons than a changing trade structure must be responsible for the increasing emissions embodied in imports.}},
  author       = {{Luginsland, Annika}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Long-term Specialization and Trade Flow Patterns of Heavy Industrial and Light Industrial Goods: A Comparative Analysis of Anglophone and Nordic countries}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}