Volume 31, Issue 1
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Marginal Intra‐Industry Trade and Adjustment Costs: The Australian Experience*

Michael Thorpe

Curtin Business School, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia

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Nuno Carlos Leitão

ESGTS, Polytechnic Institute of Santarém, and Center for Advanced Studies in Management and Economics (CEGAFE‐UE), Évora University, Portugal

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First published: 20 February 2012
Michael Thorpe, Curtin Business School, Curtin University, Perth, WA 6008, Australia. Email: m.thorpe@curtin.edu.au

Thanks go to two anonymous referees for their helpful comments. The usual caveat applies.

Abstract

The objective of this research is to investigate labour market adjustment in Australian manufacturing industry over the period 1992–2000, a time of significant adjustment in the country’s trade pattern. Specifically, the focus is on the so‐called smooth adjustment hypothesis, which posits that, compared with inter‐industry trade, intra‐industry trade (IIT) expansion is associated with relatively lower factor adjustment costs. A dynamic panel data approach (GMM‐System) is employed. We find that there is a negative correlation between changes in employment and increased IIT. This result provides support for the smooth adjustment hypothesis. Given the rise in IIT as a proportion of Australia’s overall trade during the period under review, the resulting trade‐related adjustment in labour markets is likely to have been less than otherwise expected.

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