Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Subhayu Bandyopadhyay is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Subhayu Bandyopadhyay.


Review of International Economics | 2005

Ethnic Networks and US Exports

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Cletus C. Coughlin; Howard J. Wall

This paper provides new estimates of the effects of ethnic networks on US exports. In line with recent research, our dataset is a panel of exports from US states to 29 foreign countries. Our analysis departs from the literature in two ways, both of which show that previous estimates of the ethnic-network elasticity of trade are sensitive to the restrictions imposed on the estimated models. Our first departure is to control for unobserved heterogeneity with properly specified fixed effects, which we can do because our dataset contains a time dimension absent from previous studies. Our second departure is to remove the restriction that the network effect is the same for all ethnicities. We find that ethnic-network effects are much larger than has been estimated previously, although they are important only for a subset of countries.


Economica | 2008

The Interplay between Preemptive and Defensive Counterterrorism Measures: A Two-Stage Game

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Todd Sandler

A two-stage game depiction of counterterrorism is presented, where the emphasis is on the interaction between the preemptive and defensive measures taken by two targeted countries facing a common threat. The preemptor is likely to be the high-cost defender with the greater foreign interests. A prime-target country may also assume the preemptor role. The analysis identifies key factors - cost comparisons, foreign interests, and targeting risks - that determine counterterrorism allocations. The study shows that the market failures associated with preemptive and defensive countermeasures may be jointly ameliorated by a disadvantaged defender. Nevertheless, the subgame perfect equilibrium will still be suboptimal owing to a preemption choice that does not fully internalize the externalities.


Journal of International Economics | 1997

Demand elasticities, asymmetry and strategic trade policy

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay

Abstract This paper shows that demand elasticities and cost asymmetry are important determinants of strategic trade policy. In the symmetric case, the direction of intervention is critically dependent upon the elasticity of demand. Under unit elastic demand, free trade is optimal under symmetry, and a subsidy (tax) is optimal if the exporting firm has lower (higher) marginal cost than its competitor. If both the exporting governments intervene, then the conventional result that the lower cost firm gets the higher subsidy is reversed for inelastic demand. However, such an equilibrium is unstable in policy space.


Archive | 2007

Corruption and Trade Protection: Evidence from Panel Data

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Suryadipta Roy

This paper provides new estimates of the effects of corruption and poor institutions on trade protection. It exploits data on several measures of trade protection including import duty, international trade taxes, and the trade-GDP ratio. The paper complements the literature on the relationship between corruption and trade reform. It deviates from the previous literature in several ways. First, unobserved heterogeneity among countries have been controlled with properly specified fixed effects exploiting the time dimension present in the dataset. Secondly, instead of using tariff and non-tariff barriers, more general measures of trade protection have been used. The issue of endogeneity of corruption with respect to trade policy has been addressed using proper instruments for corruption used in previous studies. Moreover, two separate institutional measures have been used in the same regression to estimate their comparative impacts on trade policy. In general, we find that corruption and lack of contract enforcement have strong impacts to increase trade protection and negative effects on trade openness.


Archive | 2007

Foreign Aid and Export Performance: A Panel Data Analysis of Developing Countries

Jonathan Munemo; Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Arabinda Basistha

The effect of foreign aid on economic activity of a country can be dampened due to potentially adverse effects on exports through a real exchange rate appreciation. In this study we examine the long-term relationship between export performance and foreign aid in developing countries while accounting for other factors. The estimates of direct effect of foreign aid on exports are imprecise. However, the effect of the quadratic term of foreign aid on exports is negative and precise. This implies large amount of foreign aid does adversely affect export performance. The results are robust to the use of two different export performance measures and different sub-samples.


Archive | 2011

Foreign direct investment, aid, and terrorism: an analysis of developing countries

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Todd Sandler; Javed Younas

Using a dynamic panel data framework, we investigate the relationship between the two major forms of terrorism and foreign direct investment (FDI). We then analyze how these relationships are affected by foreign aid flows. The analysis focuses on 78 developing countries for 1984- 2008. Our findings suggest that all types of terrorism depress FDI. In addition, aid mitigates the negative effects of total and domestic terrorism on FDI; however, this is not the case for transnational terrorism. This finding highlights that different forms of terrorism call for tailoring mitigating strategies. Foreign aid apparently cannot address the causes and supply lines of transnational terrorism. Aid’s ability to curb the risk to FDI for total and domestic terrorism is extremely important because (i) domestic terrorism is an overwhelming fraction of the total terrorism for many developing nations, and (ii) FDI is an important engine of development for these nations.


Review of Development Economics | 2005

Immigration and Outsourcing: A General Equilibrium Analysis

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Howard J. Wall

This paper analyzes immigration and outsourcing in a general-equilibrium model of international factor mobility. In our model, legal immigration of skilled labor is controlled through a quota, while outsourcing is determined both by the firms in response to market conditions and through policy-imposed barriers. A loosening of the immigration quota reduces outsourcing, enriches capitalists, leads to losses for native workers, and raises national income. If the nation targets an exogenously determined immigration level, the second-best outsourcing tax can be either positive or negative. If in addition to the immigration target there is a wage target arising out of income distribution concerns, an outsourcing subsidy is required. We extend the analysis to consider illegal immigration of unskilled labor. A higher legal immigration quota will lead to more (less) illegal immigration if skilled and unskilled labor are complements (substitutes) in production.


Review of International Economics | 2000

Unionized Bertrand Duopoly and Strategic Export Policy

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Sudeshna Champati Bandyopadhyay; Eun-Soo Park

The paper reports that an export subsidy is optimal for a unionized Bertrand duopoly. Following results published by Brander and Spencer (1988), this establishes the robustness of export subsidization to the mode of competition (Cournot or Bertrand), and contrasts with nonunion results in the literature. If both firms are unionized and both governments pursue active trade policies, a subsidy remains optimal except for a narrow range of extreme substitutability between products. Nations with a lower opportunity cost of labor employ more aggressive policies in equilibrium. Copyright 2000 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.


Review of International Economics | 1999

Customs Union or Free Trade Area? The Role of Political Asymmetries

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay; Howard J. Wall

When trade policy is determined endogenously by lobbying, it matters whether countries are arranged into a customs union or a free trade area. This paper compares the two regimes when the member governments are asymmetric in their susceptibilities to lobbying and in their bargaining power within a customs union. In the model, a customs union never leads to lower tariffs for both countries, whereas it can lead to higher tariffs for both. Copyright 1999 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.


Review of International Economics | 2006

Illegal Immigration and Second-Best Import Tariffs

Subhayu Bandyopadhyay

A version of the small-union Meade model is presented to analyze the illegal immigration problem in the context of import tariffs. Two possible host nation objectives are considered: (i) to control the level of illegal immigration to a given target; or (ii) to choose an illegal immigration level that maximizes national welfare. Available policy instruments are import tariffs/subsidies, border, and internal enforcement levels. The second-best tariff on imports from the source nation (for illegal immigration) can be of either sign. It depends on the effect of the tariff on the wage rate and the pattern of substitutability in consumption. In scenario (ii), greater enforcement may be justified if it reduces labor inflow and thereby contracts the protected sector. If enforcement is too costly, tariff policy may substitute for it to exploit monopsony power in the labor market and to counter the distortionary effects of labor flows.

Collaboration


Dive into the Subhayu Bandyopadhyay's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Javed Younas

American University of Sharjah

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sajal Lahiri

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Todd Sandler

University of Texas at Dallas

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cletus C. Coughlin

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge