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This paper examines patterns of market integration for food commodities in India. First, it tests the extent of domestic spatial market integration for retail and wholesale markets in 2006-14 and 2008-15, respectively, and looks at patterns of price transmission of shocks from international sources. Second, it measures vertical integration from wholesale to retail markets and tests for asymmetric speed of adjustment to shocks. Third, it examines the determinants of spatial integration. The results reveal that in India, food markets are imperfectly integrated across space, with the law of one price being systematically rejected, with heterogeneities across states and products. There is substantial co-movement between wholesale and retail prices, although integration is still imperfect in all commodities but one: rice, for which perfect vertical integration cannot be rejected. Retail prices adjust faster when wholesale prices rise than when wholesale prices fall. The analysis of the determinants of spatial integration reveals that prior to implementation of the Goods and Services Tax, the mere act of crossing a state border increased prices; unexploited gains from arbitrage persisted after considering the effects of transport costs; and information frictions and menu costs reduced market integration.
Asymmetric Price Transmission --- Border Effects --- Food Security --- Hydrology --- International Economics and Trade --- International Trade and Trade Rules --- Law of One Price --- Market Integration --- Panel Cointegration --- Pass Through --- Speed of Adjustment --- Trade and Services --- Transport --- Water Resources
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This paper analyzes the drivers and consequences of sudden stops of capital flows. It focuses on the impact of external vulnerability on the depth and length of sudden stop crises. The authors analyze 43 developing and developed countries between 1993 and 2006. They find evidence that external vulnerability not only significantly impacts the probability of a sudden stop crisis, but also prolongs the time it takes for growth to revert to its long-term trend once a sudden stop occurs. Interestingly, external vulnerability does not significantly impact the size of the instantaneous output effect in case of a sudden stop but prompts a cumulative output effect through significantly diminishing the speed of adjustment of output to its trend. This finding implies that countries financing a large part of their absorption externally do not suffer more ferocious output losses in a sudden stop crisis, but take longer to adapt afterward and are hence expected to suffer more protracted crises periods. Compared with previous literature, this paper makes three contributions: (i) it extends the country and time coverage relative to datasets that have previously been used to analyze related topics; (ii) it specifically accounts for time-series autocorrelation; and (iii) it provides an analysis of the adjustment path of economic growth after a sudden stop.
Adjustment dynamics --- Adjustment path --- Annual growth --- Capital flows --- Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Debt Markets --- Descriptive statistics --- Economic Growth --- Economic growth --- Economic policy --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Equilibrium --- Exchange rate fluctuations --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial crisis --- Growth performance --- Growth rate --- Growth rates --- Inequality --- International financial markets --- Investment and Investment Climate --- Macroeconomic Management --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Poverty Reduction --- Poverty reduction --- Private Sector Development --- Pro-Poor Growth --- Real exchange rate --- Robustness checks --- Speed of adjustment --- Time horizon --- Trade shocks
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This paper analyzes the drivers and consequences of sudden stops of capital flows. It focuses on the impact of external vulnerability on the depth and length of sudden stop crises. The authors analyze 43 developing and developed countries between 1993 and 2006. They find evidence that external vulnerability not only significantly impacts the probability of a sudden stop crisis, but also prolongs the time it takes for growth to revert to its long-term trend once a sudden stop occurs. Interestingly, external vulnerability does not significantly impact the size of the instantaneous output effect in case of a sudden stop but prompts a cumulative output effect through significantly diminishing the speed of adjustment of output to its trend. This finding implies that countries financing a large part of their absorption externally do not suffer more ferocious output losses in a sudden stop crisis, but take longer to adapt afterward and are hence expected to suffer more protracted crises periods. Compared with previous literature, this paper makes three contributions: (i) it extends the country and time coverage relative to datasets that have previously been used to analyze related topics; (ii) it specifically accounts for time-series autocorrelation; and (iii) it provides an analysis of the adjustment path of economic growth after a sudden stop.
Adjustment dynamics --- Adjustment path --- Annual growth --- Capital flows --- Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Debt Markets --- Descriptive statistics --- Economic Growth --- Economic growth --- Economic policy --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Equilibrium --- Exchange rate fluctuations --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial crisis --- Growth performance --- Growth rate --- Growth rates --- Inequality --- International financial markets --- Investment and Investment Climate --- Macroeconomic Management --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Poverty Reduction --- Poverty reduction --- Private Sector Development --- Pro-Poor Growth --- Real exchange rate --- Robustness checks --- Speed of adjustment --- Time horizon --- Trade shocks
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