Working Paper

Within US Trade and the Long Shadow of the American Secession

Gabriel Felbermayr, Jasmin Katrin Gröschl
ifo Institut, München, 2011

Ifo Working Paper No. 117

Using data from the US commodity flow surveys, we show that the historical Union- Confederacy border lowers contemporaneous trade between US states by about 16 percent relative to trade flows within the former alliances. Amongst one million placebos, there is no other constellation of state grouping that would yield a larger border effect. The finding is robust over different econometric models, treatment of the rest of the world, available survey waves, or levels of aggregation. Including contemporaneous controls, such as network, institutional or demographic variables, and Heckscher-Ohlin or Linder terms, lowers the estimate only slightly. Historical variables, such as the incidence of slavery, do not explain the effect away. Adding US states unaffected by the Civil War, we argue that the friction is not merely reflecting unmeasured North-South differences. Finally, the estimated border effect is larger for differentiated than for homogeneous goods, stressing the potential role for cultural factors and trust.

Schlagwörter: American Secession, border effect, intranational trade, gravity, US state levels
JEL Klassifikation: F150, N720, N920, Z100