Peter Egger
;
Michael Pfaffermayr

distance, trade and fdi: a hausman–taylor sur approach (replication data)

This paper analyses the effects of distance as a common determinant of exports and FDI in a three-factor New Trade Theory model, assuming that distance affects both pure trade costs and plant set-up costs. Exports and FDI are not necessarily substitutes with respect to distance, since the predicted impact depends on its importance for fixed plant set-up costs relative to transportation costs and on the relative importance of vertical MNEs. For the empirical specification, we suggest that the impact of time-invariant variables such as distance is most appropriately analysed in a Hausman-Taylor SUR model. We apply our model to industry-level data of bilateral outward FDI stocks and exports of the US and Germany.

Data and Resources

Suggested Citation

Egger, Peter; Pfaffermayr, Michael (2004): Distance, trade and FDI: a Hausman–Taylor SUR approach (replication data). Version: 1. Journal of Applied Econometrics. Dataset. http://dx.doi.org/10.15456/jae.2022319.0705079387