Inter-Provincial Trade in Argentina: Financial Flows and Centralism

Working papers | 2021 | N 94

Authors

  • Pedro Elosegui Banco Central de la República Argentina https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4120-7855
  • Marcos Herrera-Gómez Banco Central de la República Argentina
  • Jorge Colina Instituto para el Desarrollo Social Argentino

Keywords:

Gravity model, Spatial interactions, Redistribution federal arrangement

Abstract

This paper is part of a broader agenda and constitutes a first step to empirically understand the main determinants of the inter-provincial trade in Argentina. We use a novel database of regional trade flows between the 24 Argentinean provinces for 2017. Using a structural gravity model and novel econometric techniques we analyze the main variables influencing trade between the provinces. In addition to the traditional variables of the canonical gravity model we add some variables of interest that ca possible affect trade between sub national jurisdictions. With an especial focus in financial flows we analyze the impact of co-participation transfers, income distribution and household’s payment methods, among other variables that may be correlated with formal trade. Additionally, we analyze the potential impact of trade concentration in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (CABA) and Buenos Aires. Trade flows are analyzed considering both, origin and destination. The results indicate that national transfers from the redistribution federal arrangement are an important determinant of inter provincial trade generating relevant (and negative in the origin) spillover effects between the provinces. Also, the concentration in CABA and Buenos Aires discourages inter-provincial trade.

JEL classification: R10, F14, C21

Portada documento de trabajo 94

Published

2021-07-07

How to Cite

Elosegui, P., Herrera-Gómez, M., & Colina, J. (2021). Inter-Provincial Trade in Argentina: Financial Flows and Centralism: Working papers | 2021 | N 94. Working papers. retrieved from https://bcra.ojs.theke.io/documentos_de_trabajo/article/view/212

Issue

Section

Articles