HUSCAP logo Hokkaido Univ. logo

Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers >
Graduate School of Economics and Business / Faculty of Economics and Business >
Peer-reviewed Journal Articles, etc >

An empirical approach to measure unobserved cultural relations using music trade data

Files in This Item:
TT2022JCE-HUSCAP.pdf6.39 MBPDFView/Open
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/2115/90316

Title: An empirical approach to measure unobserved cultural relations using music trade data
Authors: Takara, Yuki Browse this author →KAKEN DB
Takagi, Shingo Browse this author →KAKEN DB
Keywords: Cultural relations
Music trade
Gravity equation
Interactive fixed effect
Expectation conditional maximization algorithm
Issue Date: 18-Aug-2022
Publisher: Springer
Journal Title: Journal of Cultural Economics
Volume: 47
Start Page: 205
End Page: 245
Publisher DOI: 10.1007/s10824-022-09455-6
Abstract: Cultural relations between countries influence the exchange of cultural goods. This study provides novel knowledge of unobserved cultural relations by mea- suring the effect of cultural relations on the trade in recorded music compact discs, using the gravity model of international trade. We consider such relations as unob- served heterogeneity and introduce into the standard model a factor structure (multi- ple interactive fixed effect terms) to extract the features of unobserved relations, in- cluding cultural relations, between trading countries. We also consider the existence of multiple zero-trade country pairs and introduce a selectivity structure to account for zero flows. After the estimation procedure, we derive the implications of cultural relations from the estimated values of interactive terms using multivariate analysis. From the results of post-estimation analysis, the estimated values of our interactive terms could be interpreted as the effect of cultural relations. In addition to the positive effect of cultural proximity on trade, which existing studies have revealed, our inter- active terms could capture (i) the negative effect of cultural proximity on music trade, such as home consumption bias, (ii) the positive effect of modern music consumption trend on music trade, which is unexplained by cultural proximity based on traditional cultural studies.
Type: article (author version)
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2115/90316
Appears in Collections:経済学院・経済学研究院 (Graduate School of Economics and Business / Faculty of Economics and Business) > 雑誌発表論文等 (Peer-reviewed Journal Articles, etc)

Export metadata:

OAI-PMH ( junii2 , jpcoar_1.0 )

MathJax is now OFF:


 

 - Hokkaido University