Salvador Gil-Pareja
University of Valencia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Salvador Gil-Pareja.
Review of International Economics | 2007
Salvador Gil-Pareja; Rafael Llorca-Vivero; José Antonio Martínez-Serrano
This paper estimates the effect of the euro on intra‐EMU tourist flows by using a panel dataset of 20 OECD countries over the period 1995–2002. The results reveal that the euro has increased tourism, with an effect of around 6.5%. This is a noticeable impact given the early stage of the EMU analyzed. The robustness checks show that the evidence of a positive impact is quite widespread across EMU destination countries.
European Economic Review | 2003
Salvador Gil-Pareja
Abstract This paper investigates PTM behaviour in European car markets for a period of great interest (1993–98), taking into account the role of invoicing currency. The results indicate that local currency price stability is a strong and pervasive phenomenon across products independently of the invoicing currency. The paper offers robustness checks, tests and arguments that justify the interpretation of this finding, at least in part, as evidence of PTM. It implies the existence of market segmentation and price discrimination, despite the completion of the single market programme on 1 January 1993.
Review of World Economics | 2000
Salvador Gil-Pareja
Exchange Rates and European Countries’ Export Prices: An Empirical Test for Asymmetries in Pricing to Market Behavior. — This paper uses forward instead of spot exchange rates to test for the presence of asymmetries in the response of export prices to exchange rate movements on a wide sample of European Union exporter countries and highly disaggregated product categories. In most cases, the data give support to the hypothesis of a symmetric pricing to market behavior during periods of depreciation and appreciation of the exporter’s currency.ZusammenfassungWechselkurse und Exportpreise europÄischer LÄnder: Ein empirischer Test von Asymmetrien in der Preispolitik der Exporteure. — In diesem Aufsatz wird getestet, ob Exporteure ihre Preise nach einer Aufwertung anders setzen als nach einer Abwertung, sich also nach WechselkursÄnderungen asymmetrisch verhalten. Hierfür werden Devisenterminkurse statt Devisenkassakurse benutzt und auf eine gro\e Stichprobe von ExportlÄndern der EuropÄischen Union und stark disaggregierte Produktkategorien angewendet. In den meisten FÄllen unterstützen die Daten die Hypothese eines symmetrischen Preisverhaltens sowohl wÄhrend einer Abwertung als auch wÄhrend einer Aufwertung der WÄhrung des Exportlandes.
Applied Economics Letters | 2004
Simón Sosvilla-Rivero; Salvador Gil-Pareja
This study investigates the relationship between market integration and price convergence in international markets. Using a panel data set of consumer price indices (general and by groups and classes), it examines how European market integration has affected cross-country dispersion in the European Union.
Review of International Economics | 2002
Salvador Gil-Pareja
The paper studies pricing-to-market behavior on a wide range of disaggregated European Union exports to OECD countries. The sample allows better identification of products for which such behavior is pervasive. The results suggest that the degree of markup adjustment in response to exchange rate changes is similar across destination markets. The evidence of pricing-to-market across source countries ranges from 40% (Netherlands) to 63% (Germany) of the products in the sample, except for the United Kingdom, where there is remarkably little evidence of it. However, formal comparisons across source countries by product do not usually reveal differences in behavior.
Applied Economics Letters | 2013
Salvador Gil-Pareja; Rafael-Llorca Vivero; Jordi Paniagua
This article estimates the effect of the present global systemic banking crisis on foreign direct investment (FDI) using the gravity equation on a sample of 161 countries over the period 2003 to 2010. Systemic banking crises, through demand shocks and credit constraints, may impact FDI in two ways: aggregate monetary flows and individual projects count. Since gravity equations account for output variations, our research relies on the financial constraints channel. We find that the great recession, through credit constraints on home supply markets, has reduced the number of FDI projects, but not their size, forcing investors to become more selective on their international endeavours.
Journal of Applied Economics | 2002
Salvador Gil-Pareja; Simón Sosvilla-Rivero
This paper examines the degree and recent evolution (1988-2001) of export-price dispersion among European Union countries. It also explores the effect of exchange rates on export-price dispersion by reviewing the experience of some European countries that participated in the exchange rate stability zone. The results indicate that export-price dispersion across European Union countries was usually lower than across OECD countries. Moreover, although there is little evidence of convergence, this is stronger across European Union countries. Finally, even though price dispersion was often lower across European Union countries where exchange rates have been relatively stable than across countries with relatively volatile exchange rates, exchange-rate stability has not significantly contributed to export-price convergence across participating countries over the sample period.
Applied Economics | 2012
Simón Sosvilla-Rivero; Salvador Gil-Pareja
This article contributes to the literature on price convergence in Europe by investigating the existence of stochastic and deterministic convergence of car prices in the EU15 countries. We apply recently developed econometric techniques that allow for multiple structural breaks to an up-to-date dataset. We find considerable evidence of both types of convergence in our sample of countries and car models, therefore suggesting a tendency for relative prices to equalize over time. In addition, we find evidence regarding the importance in this convergence process of both legislative changes taking place in the years 1996 and 2002, and the implementation of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU).
Review of Development Economics | 2017
Salvador Gil-Pareja; Rafael Llorca-Vivero; José Antonio Martínez-Serrano
This paper analyzes how a countrys degree of economic development affects the impact of banking crises on international trade. To this end, we estimate a gravity model of trade using a sample of 139 countries over the period 1975–2012. Our results show that middle income countries are generally the most negatively affected. In contrast, financial turmoil appears to have less impact on bilateral trade flows among high income countries and, more specially, among low income nations. The level of financial development, contract enforcement, as well as the extent of the use of banking credit within international trade all help to explain our findings.
The World Economy | 2005
Salvador Gil-Pareja; Rafael Llorca-Vivero; José Antonio Martínez-Serrano; Josep Oliver-Alonso