Religion and International Trade: Does the Sharing of a Religious Culture Facilitate the Formation of Trade Networks?

Despite interest in the influence of religion on economic activity by early economists like Adam Smith, modern economists have done little research on the subject. In light of the apparent religious fervor in many parts of the global economy, economists' seeming lack of interest in studying how...

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Published inThe American journal of economics and sociology Vol. 66; no. 4; pp. 765 - 794
Main Authors Lewer, Joshua J., Van den Berg, Hendrik
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Malden, USA Blackwell Publishing Inc 01.10.2007
Blackwell Publishing
American Journal of Economics and Sociology
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Summary:Despite interest in the influence of religion on economic activity by early economists like Adam Smith, modern economists have done little research on the subject. In light of the apparent religious fervor in many parts of the global economy, economists' seeming lack of interest in studying how religious cultures enhance or retard the globalization of economic activity is especially surprising. This article makes a contribution toward filling this void by examining how religion affects international trade. Specifically, we examine whether the sharing of religious cultures enables the formation of exchange networks that can overcome the failure or nonexistence of other social and economic institutions necessary for completing complex international transactions. We apply an expanded gravity model of international trade to control for a variety of factors that determine trade, and we use two recently developed regression methods, scaled OLS and nonlinear least squares, to exploit the model to its fullest. We find that the sharing of Buddhist, Confucian, Hindu, Eastern Orthodox Catholic, and Protestant cultures by people in different countries has a significantly positive influence on bilateral trade, all other things equal. The sharing of Roman Catholic culture has a significantly negative influence on bilateral trade, and the sharing of Islamic and Judaic cultures neither promotes nor discourages international exchange. These results suggest that some religious cultures are more conducive than others for forming international trade networks.
Bibliography:ArticleID:AJES539
istex:5D0D092291B7BEAEE2563ECAB358A22B1201D0DE
ark:/67375/WNG-6S62WZ3J-L
hvan‐den‐berg1@unl.edu
The Economics of Immigration
International Trade and Economic Growth: A Dynamic Relationship
Joshua J. Lewer is Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, Bradley University, Peoria, IL 61625; e‐mail
ASEAN Economic Bulletin
(
McGraw‐Hill, 2001
jlewer@bradley.edu
Joshua has published in the
,
Hendrik has published articles on international trade, international finance, and economic growth in numerous journals. He has written two textbooks
and he is finishing the manuscripts for
The authors would like to thank the two anonymous referees and this journal's editor for their very helpful and constructive comments and suggestions.
(with Josh Lewer) and
Journal of International Trade and Economic Growth
McGraw‐Hill, 2004
and
International Growth and Development
Hendrik Van den Berg is Associate Professor, Department of Economics, University of Nebraska, Lincoln NE 68588‐0489; e‐mail
Journal of Economic Surveys
International Economics
The International Trade Journal
among others. He and Hendrik Van den Berg are the co‐authors of
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ISSN:0002-9246
1536-7150
DOI:10.1111/j.1536-7150.2007.00539.x