Essays on international trade

Detalhes bibliográficos
Ano de defesa: 2024
Autor(a) principal: Mariano, Lucas de Castro
Orientador(a): Ornelas, Emanuel
Banca de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Tipo de documento: Tese
Tipo de acesso: Acesso aberto
Idioma: eng
Instituição de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Programa de Pós-Graduação: Não Informado pela instituição
Departamento: Não Informado pela instituição
País: Não Informado pela instituição
Palavras-chave em Inglês:
Link de acesso: https://hdl.handle.net/10438/35438
Resumo: This paper investigates the effects of Brazil’s 1990s trade liberalization on dropout rates from higher education. Since the trade shock had strong effects on the labor market, it could also have affected educational decisions. Using a shift-share instrument combining tariff cuts and employment across industries in a region to measure local economy exposure to the trade shock, we find that regions more exposed to the exogenous tariff cuts experienced a permanent relative increase in dropout rates of 7 percent even 20 years after the trade reform. Computing different regional tariff shock measures for adult and young workers, we find that the net effect is mainly explained by the impact on adult workers. This suggests that the income effect more than offsets the substitution effect in determining the impact of tariff cuts. This paper examines the impact of Brazil’s 1991 trade liberalization on intergenerational mobility (IGM). To measure the local economy’s exposure to the trade shock, we employ a shift-share instrument that combines tariff cuts and employment across industries within a region. Our findings indicate that regions with higher exposure to the exogenous tariff reductions experienced a permanent relative decline in upward occupational mobility and a long-term decrease in both absolute income and relative educational mobility compared to regions with less pronounced effects. Additionally, we analyze IGM measures separately for son-father and daughter-mother pairs to account for gender heterogeneity, where daughters suffer higher reductions in income and educational mobility. We find that the overall effect is primarily driven by negative consequences in the labor market, characterized by an increase in the proportion of low-skilled occupations and a decrease in earnings levels following the trade shock. Rural-to-urban migration has been an issue that has been raised with the structural transformation of developing countries transitioning from rural to urban activities. In this paper, we aim to explore the effects of the China trade shock in Brazil on the share of people living in slums. Brazil’s trade with China predominantly involves exporting agricultural and extractive goods, while the growth in imports was concentrated in manufactures. We leverage this unique context and construct two measures of exposition to trade, one local and the other at the origin of migrants. We find that local exposition to import competition is correlated with reductions in the population living in slums, and export demand at the origin reinforces this effect, deterring migrants from moving from rural to urban areas.
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spelling Mariano, Lucas de CastroEscolas::EESPPessoa, João PauloCavalcanti, TiagoCrowley, MeredithHoste, JorisOrnelas, Emanuel2024-06-14T12:37:55Z2024-06-14T12:37:55Z2024-05-16https://hdl.handle.net/10438/35438This paper investigates the effects of Brazil’s 1990s trade liberalization on dropout rates from higher education. Since the trade shock had strong effects on the labor market, it could also have affected educational decisions. Using a shift-share instrument combining tariff cuts and employment across industries in a region to measure local economy exposure to the trade shock, we find that regions more exposed to the exogenous tariff cuts experienced a permanent relative increase in dropout rates of 7 percent even 20 years after the trade reform. Computing different regional tariff shock measures for adult and young workers, we find that the net effect is mainly explained by the impact on adult workers. This suggests that the income effect more than offsets the substitution effect in determining the impact of tariff cuts. This paper examines the impact of Brazil’s 1991 trade liberalization on intergenerational mobility (IGM). To measure the local economy’s exposure to the trade shock, we employ a shift-share instrument that combines tariff cuts and employment across industries within a region. Our findings indicate that regions with higher exposure to the exogenous tariff reductions experienced a permanent relative decline in upward occupational mobility and a long-term decrease in both absolute income and relative educational mobility compared to regions with less pronounced effects. Additionally, we analyze IGM measures separately for son-father and daughter-mother pairs to account for gender heterogeneity, where daughters suffer higher reductions in income and educational mobility. We find that the overall effect is primarily driven by negative consequences in the labor market, characterized by an increase in the proportion of low-skilled occupations and a decrease in earnings levels following the trade shock. Rural-to-urban migration has been an issue that has been raised with the structural transformation of developing countries transitioning from rural to urban activities. In this paper, we aim to explore the effects of the China trade shock in Brazil on the share of people living in slums. Brazil’s trade with China predominantly involves exporting agricultural and extractive goods, while the growth in imports was concentrated in manufactures. We leverage this unique context and construct two measures of exposition to trade, one local and the other at the origin of migrants. We find that local exposition to import competition is correlated with reductions in the population living in slums, and export demand at the origin reinforces this effect, deterring migrants from moving from rural to urban areas.Este trabalho investiga os efeitos da liberalização comercial do Brasil nos anos 1990 nas taxas de abandono do ensino superior. Como o choque comercial teve fortes efeitos no mercado de trabalho, ele também poderia ter afetado as decisões educacionais. Usando um instrumento "shift-share" que combina cortes tarifários e emprego em diferentes indústrias em uma região para medir a exposição da economia local ao choque comercial, descobrimos que regiões mais expostas aos cortes tarifários exógenos experimentaram um aumento relativo permanente nas taxas de abandono de 7% mesmo 20 anos após a reforma comercial. Calculando diferentes medidas de choque tarifário regional para trabalhadores adultos e jovens, descobrimos que o efeito líquido é explicado principalmente pelo impacto nos trabalhadores adultos. Isso sugere que o efeito renda mais do que compensa o efeito substituição na determinação do impacto dos cortes tarifários.engTrade shocksLocal economyHigher educationBrazilIntergenerational mobilitySlumsEconomiaComércio internacionalBrasil - Política comercialEnsino superiorMercado de trabalhoMobilidade socialEssays on international tradeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional do FGV (FGV Repositório Digital)instname:Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV)instacron:FGVORIGINALTese - Lucas Mariano - FGV EESP.pdfTese - Lucas Mariano - FGV EESP.pdfPDFapplication/pdf7127761https://repositorio.fgv.br/bitstreams/2ab6e1db-6187-4e0f-8b85-16f06b05c701/download9ffaf61e2dc38bd93a3d47588cc399e9MD51LICENSElicense.txtlicense.txttext/plain; charset=utf-85112https://repositorio.fgv.br/bitstreams/403ceca3-a881-4703-a98c-afecee1950c4/download2a4b67231f701c416a809246e7a10077MD52TEXTTese - Lucas Mariano - FGV 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dc.title.eng.fl_str_mv Essays on international trade
title Essays on international trade
spellingShingle Essays on international trade
Mariano, Lucas de Castro
Trade shocks
Local economy
Higher education
Brazil
Intergenerational mobility
Slums
Economia
Comércio internacional
Brasil - Política comercial
Ensino superior
Mercado de trabalho
Mobilidade social
title_short Essays on international trade
title_full Essays on international trade
title_fullStr Essays on international trade
title_full_unstemmed Essays on international trade
title_sort Essays on international trade
author Mariano, Lucas de Castro
author_facet Mariano, Lucas de Castro
author_role author
dc.contributor.unidadefgv.por.fl_str_mv Escolas::EESP
dc.contributor.member.none.fl_str_mv Pessoa, João Paulo
Cavalcanti, Tiago
Crowley, Meredith
Hoste, Joris
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Mariano, Lucas de Castro
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Ornelas, Emanuel
contributor_str_mv Ornelas, Emanuel
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Trade shocks
Local economy
Higher education
Brazil
Intergenerational mobility
Slums
topic Trade shocks
Local economy
Higher education
Brazil
Intergenerational mobility
Slums
Economia
Comércio internacional
Brasil - Política comercial
Ensino superior
Mercado de trabalho
Mobilidade social
dc.subject.area.por.fl_str_mv Economia
dc.subject.bibliodata.por.fl_str_mv Comércio internacional
Brasil - Política comercial
Ensino superior
Mercado de trabalho
Mobilidade social
description This paper investigates the effects of Brazil’s 1990s trade liberalization on dropout rates from higher education. Since the trade shock had strong effects on the labor market, it could also have affected educational decisions. Using a shift-share instrument combining tariff cuts and employment across industries in a region to measure local economy exposure to the trade shock, we find that regions more exposed to the exogenous tariff cuts experienced a permanent relative increase in dropout rates of 7 percent even 20 years after the trade reform. Computing different regional tariff shock measures for adult and young workers, we find that the net effect is mainly explained by the impact on adult workers. This suggests that the income effect more than offsets the substitution effect in determining the impact of tariff cuts. This paper examines the impact of Brazil’s 1991 trade liberalization on intergenerational mobility (IGM). To measure the local economy’s exposure to the trade shock, we employ a shift-share instrument that combines tariff cuts and employment across industries within a region. Our findings indicate that regions with higher exposure to the exogenous tariff reductions experienced a permanent relative decline in upward occupational mobility and a long-term decrease in both absolute income and relative educational mobility compared to regions with less pronounced effects. Additionally, we analyze IGM measures separately for son-father and daughter-mother pairs to account for gender heterogeneity, where daughters suffer higher reductions in income and educational mobility. We find that the overall effect is primarily driven by negative consequences in the labor market, characterized by an increase in the proportion of low-skilled occupations and a decrease in earnings levels following the trade shock. Rural-to-urban migration has been an issue that has been raised with the structural transformation of developing countries transitioning from rural to urban activities. In this paper, we aim to explore the effects of the China trade shock in Brazil on the share of people living in slums. Brazil’s trade with China predominantly involves exporting agricultural and extractive goods, while the growth in imports was concentrated in manufactures. We leverage this unique context and construct two measures of exposition to trade, one local and the other at the origin of migrants. We find that local exposition to import competition is correlated with reductions in the population living in slums, and export demand at the origin reinforces this effect, deterring migrants from moving from rural to urban areas.
publishDate 2024
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2024-06-14T12:37:55Z
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2024-06-14T12:37:55Z
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