Title of article :
Revisiting Squalli-Wilson’s Measure of Trade Openness in the Context of Services Trade
Author/Authors :
Hannafi Ibrahim, Kabiru Department of Economics - Faculty of Arts - Social and Management Sciences - Federal University, Birnin Kebbi, Nigeria; Department of Economics - Faculty of Economics and Business - Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia , Wulan Sari, Dyah Department of Economics - Faculty of Economics and Business - Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia , Dwi Handoyo, Rossanto Department of Economics - Faculty of Economics and Business - Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia
Abstract :
This study re-examines Squalli-Wilson's measure of trade openness from the perspective of services.
An attempt was made to compose all modes of services supply to form a composite measure of service
openness that has rarely been used in trade literature. A global sample comprising different regions
based on cross-country data was applied to test the reliability of this measure using correlation
coefficients, income, and environmental quality models. Ordinary Least Square (OLS) and Two-Stage
Least Square (2-SLS) Instrumental Variables approach were applied. Findings from the growth impact
of trade are robust and consistent with prevailing literature supporting the positive impact of service
trade on economic growth. However, our empirical estimate based on the two measures of
environmental pollutants, shows that services openness reduces SO2 and increases CO2 emissions. These
findings are consistent with most of the existing literature supporting the "gains from trade" hypothesis
in the case of SO2 and the "pollution havens” hypothesis in the case of CO2 emissions. Nonetheless, the
results provide further support in the context of services for the use of composite trade intensity proposed
by Squalli-Wilson that not only considered trade/GDP ratio but also the relative importance of the
country to the world trade. The inverted U-shaped EKC was also verified in both two measures of
environmental pollutions. The policy implications of these findings are that care must be taken while
increasing openness in areas of services to increase economic growth and to reduce the phenomenon of
pollution haven in the case of CO2 emissions.
Farsi abstract :
فاقد چكيده فارسي
Keywords :
Services Trade Openness , Economic Growth , Environmental Pollutants , 2-SLS Instrumental Variable , Global Cross-country Analysis
Journal title :
Iranian Economic Review (IER)