Benjamin Faber
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by Benjamin Faber.
Archive | 2018
Victor Couture; Benjamin Faber; Yizhen Gu; Lizhi Liu
The number of people buying and selling products online in China has grown from practically zero in 2000 to more than 400 million by 2015. Most of this growth has occurred in cities. In this context, the Chinese government recently announced the expansion of e-commerce to the countryside as a policy priority with the objective to close the rural-urban economic divide. As part of this agenda, the government entered a partnership with a large Chinese e-commerce firm. The program invests in the necessary logistics to ship products to and sell products from tens of thousands of villages that were largely unconnected to e-commerce trading. The firm also installs an e-commerce terminal at a central village location, where a terminal manager assists households in buying and selling products through the firms e-commerce platform. This paper combines a new collection of survey and administrative microdata with a randomized control trial (RCT) that we implement across villages in collaboration with the e-commerce firm. We use this empirical setting to provide evidence on the potential of e-commerce integration to foster economic development in the countryside, the underlying channels and the distribution of the gains from e-commerce across households and villages.
National Bureau of Economic Research | 2016
Benjamin Faber; Cecile Gaubert
Tourism is a fast-growing services sector in developing countries. This paper combines a rich collection of Mexican microdata with a quantitative spatial equilibrium model and a new empirical strategy to study the long-term economic consequences of tourism both locally and in the aggregate. We find that tourism causes large and significant local economic gains relative to less touristic regions that are in part driven by significant positive spillovers on manufacturing. In the aggregate, however, these local spillovers are largely offset by reductions in agglomeration economies among less touristic regions, so that the national gains from trade in tourism are mainly driven by a classical market integration effect.
The Review of Economic Studies | 2014
Benjamin Faber
Archive | 2012
Benjamin Faber
National Bureau of Economic Research | 2017
Benjamin Faber; Thibault Fally
National Bureau of Economic Research | 2015
David Atkin; Benjamin Faber; Marco Gonzalez-Navarro
Archive | 2017
Benjamin Faber; Benjamin Krause; Raúl Sánchez de la Sierra
CentrePiece-The Magazine for Economic Performance | 2016
Benjamin Faber; Rosa Sanchis-Guarner; Felix Weinhardt
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics | 2015
David Atkin; Benjamin Faber; Marco Gonzalez-Navarro
LSE Research Online Documents on Economics | 2015
Benjamin Faber; Rosa Sanchis-Guarner; Felix Weinhardt