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Study on the survival of China agri-food export trade relationships

Dongwen Tian (School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)
Rui Li (School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)
Wei Yao (School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)
Li Huang (School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing, China)

China Agricultural Economic Review

ISSN: 1756-137X

Article publication date: 28 January 2014

766

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to study whether, of China's food and agriculture (agri-food) export, the trade relationships along the extensive margin can transform into short-term ones, and further convert into long-term ones along the intensive margin with survival and maintenance, especially, under what kind of conditions these transformation realize successfully, and what the factors are and how they impact on the length of the trade relationships duration.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper comprises three stages: decomposing China's agricultural export data (1999-2008) into highly disaggregated three distinct parts; with the Kaplan-Meier (KM) nonparametric estimation, discovering the practical source of stable and long-term export growth, and the threshold at which the short-run trade relationships deriving from newly established ones convert into long-run ones successfully; by semi parametric estimation through Cox proportional hazard model, preliminarily examining the possible impact of different factors on the trade relationship's hazard rate and duration.

Findings

The paper reveals that China agri-food trade pattern at the product level is surprisingly dynamic with newly established trade relations being more likely to fail. While the frequent volatilities of short-term relations at the extensive margin could be used to evaluate the source of short-term export growth especially and effectively, the pattern of negative dependence together with the threshold effect of duration indicates, only when these short-term relations live longer than four years will they substantially contribute to a stable and prolonged export growth. Simultaneously, trade duration significantly correlates to importing country's development status, region it belongs to, product processing degree, export experience and geographical space between trading partners.

Research limitations/implications

To avoid the likelihood of misleading when estimating quantitatively the source of long-term export growth, researchers should be cautious in accurately evaluating the impacts of all possible factors on the two trade margins' performances, which is beyond the scope of this paper though, and a matter of ongoing work on the research agenda.

Practical implications

The study presents a set of important policy implications. Now that turnovers along the extensive margin have little impact on long-term China agri-food export growth, it turns out that improving export survival would result in significantly higher and stable export growth.

Originality/value

By distinguishing the survival of trade relationship channels from their deepening, the discoveries in the paper are crucial to understand the different role the intensive and extensive margins play in China agri-food export growth. The diversified hazard rates of export relations in different duration intervals suggest that the constant hazard rate assumption in Melitz and Bernard et al. is in some sense not appropriate.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

JEL classification – C14, C41, F14 This paper is a partial fruit for project “Decomposition of the export growth pattern of China – based on an extended heterogeneous firm trade model” supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (71173007) and has also been supported by Special Fund of Fundamental Scientific Research of Beihang University (No. 30-1450).

Citation

Tian, D., Li, R., Yao, W. and Huang, L. (2014), "Study on the survival of China agri-food export trade relationships", China Agricultural Economic Review, Vol. 6 No. 1, pp. 139-157. https://doi.org/10.1108/CAER-03-2012-0029

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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