Bilateral Trade and Political Conflict/Cooperation: Do Goods Matter?
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Peace Research
- Vol. 35 (5) , 581-602
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343398035005003
Abstract
This article investigates Granger causality between political conflict/cooperation and bilateral trade. The measures of conflict/cooperation are constructed by accumulating daily events and splicing the two datasets of the Conflict and Peace Data Bank and the World Events Interaction Survey. Trade data from the United Nations include ten commodity groups as well as total trade. Quarterly data are analyzed from the very early 1970s to the early 1990s for four dyads of USA-USSR, USA-China, Turkey-Greece, and Egypt-Israel. Yearly data are investigated from the early 1960s to the early 1990s for 16 dyads. Granger causality between bilateral trade and conflict/cooperation is generally reciprocal in most goods and dyad dependent, but independent of whether or not two countries are political rivals. For USA-USSR and USA-China, however, there is a tendency for bilateral trade to increase in some goods when political relations improve. For USA-USSR, in particular, causality from conflict to trade is pronounced in more goods than causality from trade to conflict. While the effect of cooperation in these dyads is mostly positive, the effect of an increase of trade on conflict is generally ambiguous. For 20 dyads collectively, conflict/cooperation tends to Granger-cause bilateral trade in minerals, iron and steel, fuels, basic manufactures and control and scientific equipment; whereas bilateral trade somewhat more frequently Granger-causes conflict/cooperation in food and live animals, beverages and tobacco, and machines and transport equipment. The concept of strategic goods, much debated in the literature, is further discussed in light of these results. The general result of reciprocal Granger causality calls for a model in which both bilateral trade and conflict/cooperation are simultaneously determined. Such a simultaneous equations model is briefly sketched.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Testing for causality: A personal viewpointPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- A Conflict-Cooperation Scale for WEIS Events DataJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1992
- The visible hand: The United States, Japan, and the management of trade disputesInternational Interactions, 1992
- Interdependence, Cooperation and Conflict: An Empirical AnalysisJournal of Peace Research, 1990
- Does Trade Still Follow the Flag?American Political Science Review, 1989
- Trade and conflict revisited: Do politics matter?International Interactions, 1989
- Economic Interdependence and International Conflict: Some Cross-National EvidenceInternational Studies Quarterly, 1986
- Economic Integration among Developed, Developing and Centrally Planned Economies: A Comparative AnalysisThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1985
- Conflict and InterdependenceJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1982
- Investigating Causal Relations by Econometric Models and Cross-spectral MethodsEconometrica, 1969