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Copyright The Academy of Economic Studies, The Faculty of International Business and Economics Jun 2014

Abstract

Gravity model of international trade states that trade interaction between two countries is in direct proportion to their size measured by Gross Domestic Product and in inverse proportion to the geographic distance. Conley and Ligon (2001) argued that the relevant economic distance between countries is often not the geographic distance. Thus, this study uses original datasets on economic distance to structure observed variations, to decompose the multidimensional CAGE distance framework of globalization derived from the Newton's Law of gravitation as it applies to China's international interaction, to evaluate bilateral trade patterns in identifying and prioritizing the importance of cross-border flows and differences that accounted for the development of China's global strategies. This study confirms that distance must be accounted for in the decision making of any country's globalization process or any firm's global expansion as the effects on cross-border economic activities are enormous.

Details

Title
CAGE Analysis of China's Trade Globalization
Author
Stober, Emmanuel Olusegun
Pages
39-54
Section
Young Researchers' Section
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Jun 2014
Publisher
The Academy of Economic Studies, The Faculty of International Business and Economics
e-ISSN
20673795
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1566312788
Copyright
Copyright The Academy of Economic Studies, The Faculty of International Business and Economics Jun 2014