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Setting all the c ijk equal to unity and dividing both sides of equation (4)

Setting all the c ijk equal to unity and dividing both sides of equation (4) above by j j Y j we obtain the aggregate share parameter for country i goods on the right k ik . Substituting the left-hand side into equation (3) he obtained the following gravity equation. m. i Y. Y. i. j

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Setting all the c ijk equal to unity and dividing both sides of equation (4)

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  1. Setting all the cijk equal to unity and dividing both sides of equation (4) above by j jYj we obtain the aggregate share parameter for country i goods on the right k ik. Substituting the left-hand side into equation (3) he obtained the following gravity equation. m i Y Y i j j i j M (5) ij Y j j Where mi represents the capital account scale factor, the other variables have already been defined in the text. In case the cijk are different from unity, the gravity equation takes the form.15 The theoretical explanation for the gravity equation given by Anderson had several advantages. It gave an explanation of the multiplicative form. It permits an interpretation of distance in the equation, identifying the estimated coefficient. It also gave a straightforward interpretation to the underlying assumptions of identical structure across-regions or countries as identical expenditure functions. The gravity model can then be used for the countries 15 Using Cobb Douglas preferences, and starting with the following demand equation and trade balance equations. 1 θ ik k ) φ ik (6) (7) M ij m i ( j Y j U ij 1 f ( d f ( d j Y j ) ij j k ( Y i ) i ) ij Equation (6) states that the foreign port value of country j’s demand for all of i’s goods equals country j’s total expenditure on traded goods ( in home price ) jYj times the common aggregate traded goods expenditure share for i’s goods deflated by the transit cost factor k ik Equation (7) states that country i’s expenditure on all traded goods at i’s prices iYi times the capital account scale factor mi must equal the value of country i of i’s exports to all countries. From the above two equations Anderson derived the following gravity equation 1 φ j Y j ∑ φ j Y m i Yi j .Y Y j 1 1 i j M U (8) ij ij f ( d f ( d ) ) j ij j ij j j j Where Mij represents the aggregate trade flows between country i and country j; i represents the share of expenditure on all traded goods in total expenditure of country j , Y i represents the gross national product of country i ; dij the distance between the two countries and mi indicates the capital account scale factor. The function f (dij) represents the transit costs of all sorts which are taken to be an increasing function of distance and the same across commodities. 18

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