The Determinants of Trade in The Central African Economic and Monetary Union
The Determinants of Trade in The Central African Economic and Monetary Union
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(1)
where Xij is the value of the trade flow from country i to country j; Yi and Yj are the values of
real gross domestic product in the exporting and importing countries respectively and represent
the size of both economies. Ni and Nj represent the exporter and importer populations, Dij
measures the physical distance from the economic center of country i to that of country j and
captures the transport costs. Aij represents any other factors that contribute to or obstruct bilateral
trade and ij is the error term. The s are interpreted as coefficients of elasticity of exports in
respect to changes in gross domestic product, population, distance and real exchange rate. The
coefficients of the GDPs of the exporting and importing countries are expected to be positively
related to trade. The coefficient estimates for the population may either be positive or negative
depending on whether a country exports less when it has a larger population (absorption effect)
or whether a larger country exports more than a smaller country (Prewo (1978) and Bergstrand
(1986). The coefficient of the distance variable is expected to be negative since longer distance
entail higher cost of trade. Krugman (1991) emphasized on the role of geographical proximity in
the regionalization process. He showed in his analysis that a pair of countries with low
transportation costs between them will tend to have a higher volume of trade than countries
further apart. Higher transport costs are expected to reduce trade so that the effect of distance on
trade is negative.
The generalized gravity equation is rendered estimable in the following log-linear form:
ln X ij 0 1 ln Yi 2 ln Y j 3 ln N i 4 ln N j 5 ln Dij 6 Aij ij
(2)
We augment the gravity model shown in equation (1) in order to account for as many factors as
possible that affect trade. These variables potentially account for cultural phenomenon,
geographical nature of the two countries, and the historical nature of the relationship between the
two countries. Further, we extend the gravity equation by considering the preferential trade
policies which entails unilateral reduction in trade barriers granted by developed countries to
developing countries. These are expected to stimulate exports from developing countries to the
preference-giving country yielding a higher flow of trade than that which would normally be
expected. We also take into account the location of the country with particular interest in whether
(4)
where BOR is a dummy that takes the value 1 if countries i and j share a common border and 0 if
otherwise, Dij is the lateral distance that separate the economic (or capital) centers of countries i
and j in kilometers. And CCOLij is a dummy that takes the value 1 if country i and country j have
a common colonizer and zero, otherwise. Equation (4) can also be augmented by including a
variable that measures preferential trade agreements between countries of the CEMAC region
and their major trade partners as follows:
ln(X ijt ) 0 1lnYit 2 lnYjt 3lnD ij 4 lnN ti 5 lnN jt 6 Pij 7 BOR ij
8 Landl ij 8 CEMAC 9 CCOLij 10 EU 11RER ji ijt
(5)
where, Pij is a dummy equal one if the exporting and importing country have a preferential trade
agreement such as the case of the European Union and most Sub Saharan African countries and
zero otherwise. EU is dummy that takes the value 1 if the country trading with a CEMAC
country is a member of the European Union and 0, otherwise. CEMACij is a dummy that takes
the value one if countries i and j belong to the CEMAC economic and monetary union and zero
otherwise. By including CEMAC as a dummy in the specification, it enables us to investigate if
belonging to the monetary and economic union is beneficial to trade or not. The arrangements
require that member states put in place trade-friendly monetary policies and remove tariff and
non-tariff restrictions on trade. Given that the monetary union is well structured compared to
others in Africa, we expect a significant and positive effect of the CEMAC dummy on trade.
Fixed Effects
- 2.865
(-1.74)
-0.003
(0.01)
-0.285
(-0.77)
2.319
(0.83)
0.5654
(0.19)
Random Effects
9.396
(1.02)
0.249
(1.54)
-0.055
(-0.38)
1.408***
(3.80)
-0.10
(-0.25)
-2.373*
(-1.87)
2.848***
(2.43 )
-2.340***
(-2.49)
1.1155
(1.54)
330
0.765
3.53
978.49***
Hausman-Taylor
9.680
(0.94)
0.252
(1.13)
-0.073
(-0.34)
1.4178***
(3.31)
-0.124
(-0.33)
-2.399*
(-1.73)
2.829***
(2.15)
-2.332***
(-2.62)
1.113
(1.05)
330
Number of obs
330
R-squared
0.1179
Hausman test
Breusch and Pagan test
Heteroskesdasticity test
23615.31***
Test of over-identification
3.571
(Sargan-Hasen statistic)
***, **, and * significant at 99%, 95% and 90% respectively (t-student are in brackets)
The fixed effect model allow for unobserved factors that explain the volume of trade between
two countries and leads to unbiased and efficient results (Bair and Bergstrand 2005; Carrere
2006; Rose 2000). The model also assumes that there are time-invariant characteristics that are
unique to the individual and should not be correlated with other individual characteristics. The
fixed effect from the econometric standpoint is preferable to the random effects since it is
The determinants of trade, page 9
Fixed Effects
-1.527
(-0.79)
0.942***
(3.21)
1.054***
(3.12)
1.461
(1.22)
-2.232**
(-1.88)
-1.664***
(-4.65)
Distance
Preferential Trade
Agreement
CEMAC
Common Language
Landlocked
EU
0.649***
(2.31)
1254
0.027
9.43
Random Effects
8.236
(2.66)
1.092***
(5.64)
0.704***
(3.88)
0.014
(0.07)
0.246
(0.90)
-1.818***
(-7.59)
-2.735***
(-4.26)
-0.568*
(1.28)
-1.706***
(-2.42)
0.311*
(1.66)
-0.664***
(-2.71)
0.451**
(1.79)
1254
0.540
Hausman-Taylor
8.706
(1.87)
1.112***
(6.50)
0.622**
(2.38)
0.066
(0.19)
0.1919
(0.51)
-1.830***
(-7.21)
-2.710**
(-2.49)
-0.742
(-1.32)
-1.822*
(-1.83)
0.310
(1.03)
-0.668**
(-2.04)
0.555***
(2.50)
1254
Number of observations
R-squared
Hausman Test
Breusch&Pagan test
3136.86***
Heteroskesdasticity
832.49***
Test of over-identification
7.731
***, **, and * significant at 99%, 95% and 90% respectively (t-student are in brackets)
We decide between fixed and random effects models by employing the Hausman (1978)
test for each of the samples. The test indicates whether the specific effects are correlated or not
with the explanatory variables. A high value of the Hausman test (or p-value 0.05) indicates
that the errors are correlated with the independent variables and the fixed effect model is
The determinants of trade, page 10