Institute for Economic and Social Research

The Alibaba Effect: Spatial Consumption Inequality and Welfare Gains from E-commerce

2019-03-23

The Alibaba Effect: Spatial Consumption Inequality and Welfare Gains from E-commerce

Journal of International Economics

Jingting Fan, Lixin Tang, Weiming Zhu, Ben Zou 

Abstract

Domestic trade costs reduce aggregate welfare and result in worse access to consumption goods in small and remote cities. As a new trade technology, e-commerce can increase inter-city trade and alleviate spatial consumption inequality because it (1) eliminates the fixed cost of market entry, and (2) reduces the effects of distance on trade costs. Using unique data from China's leading e-commerce platform, we provide evidence consistent with these two features: online trade is less hindered by distance relative to offline trade, and residents from smaller and more remote cities spend a larger fraction of their income online. We then build a multi-region general equilibrium model to quantify the impacts of e-commerce on domestic trade and welfare. We find that although it partially crowds out inter-city trade originally taking place offline, the emergence of e-commerce increases the aggregate domestic trade. The welfare gains from e-commerce are 1.6% on average, and are about 30% larger for cities in the smallest population and market potential quintiles.

Keywords: Domestic trade; Spatial consumption inequality; Gains from e-commerce; Online trade

JEL classification: R13; F15; R12

Read more: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinteco.2018.07.002


back

Copyright © 2019 Institute for Economic and Social Research ICP record No.: Yue ICP Bei No. 12087612