Estimating an Import Demand Function in Developing Countries: A Structural Econometric Approach with Applications to India and Sri Lanka |
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Authors: | M. Shahe Emran Forhad Shilpi |
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Affiliation: | 1. Monroe Hall # 302, 2115 G St. N.W., Washington, DC 20052, USA;2. 1818 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA;3. We would like to thank Arvind Panagariya, John Williamson, Imam Alam, Yasuyuki Sawada, and seminar participants at Stanford University for comments on earlier drafts of the paper. Special thanks to an anonymous referee of this journal for helpful suggestions that improved the paper substantially. The views expressed here do not represent the views of the World Bank or its affiliates. The authors are responsible for any remaining errors. |
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Abstract: | Owing to the unavailability of time‐series data on the domestic market‐clearing price of imports, the estimation of notional price and income elasticities of aggregate import demand remains a daunting task for a large number of developing countries. This paper develops a structural econometric model of a two‐goods representative agent economy that incorporates a binding foreign exchange constraint at the administered prices of imports. A theoretically consistent parameterization of the “virtual relative price” of imports circumvents the data problem, and thus enables the estimation of income and price responses by cointegration approach. The price and income elasticity estimates for India and Sri Lanka, in contrast to the extant literature, have correct signs, high statistical significance, and plausible magnitudes. |
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