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ID072696
Title ProperInternational politics and the disaggregation of major-power trade, 1962-1997
LanguageENG
AuthorBartilow, Horace A ;  Voss, D Stephen
Publication2006.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Previous research indicates that a country's international commerce usually tracks the pattern of its diplomatic entanglements. As the evidence for this observation comes from overall trade statistics, however, analysts have had little ability to probe the sources of the linkage. This study uses major-power trade data from 1962 to 1997, disaggregated by economic sector, within an elaborated 'gravity model' that parses out some of the potential causal paths. Our results indicate that, while (1) commercial exchanges among major powers did 'follow the flag' (2) within all sectors during the period under study, not only those with immediately military value, (3) national traits that are causally prior to foreign relations, but often excluded from studies of international trade, also predicted trade in each sector, and (4) the major-power democracies did not show any particular favoritism to each other after these national differences in trade activity are considered.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Politics Vol. 43, No. 3; Jul 2006: p362-383
Journal SourceInternational Politics Vol: 43 No 3
Key WordsWorld Politics ;  Major Powers ;  International Trade ;  International Relations