Staff Reports
The Home Market, Trade, and Industrial Structure
December 1997 Number 35
JEL classification: F12

Author: Donald R. Davis

Does national market size matter for industrial structure? This has been suggested by theoretical work on "home market"effects, as in Krugman (1980, 1995). In this paper, I show that what previously was regarded as an assumption of convenience—transport costs only for the differentiated goods—matters a great deal. In a focal case in which differentiated and homogeneous goods have identical transport costs, the home market effect disappears. The paper discusses available evidence on the relative trade costs for differentiated and homogeneous goods. No compelling argument is found that market size will matter for industrial structure.

Available only in PDFPDF29 pages / 120 kb

For a published version of this report, see Donald R. Davis, "The Home Market, Trade, and Industrial Structure," American Economic Review 88, no. 5 (December 1998): 1264-76.

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