The Rise of GCC – East Asian Trade: A cointegration Approach to Analysing trade Relationships
Document Type
Article
Source of Publication
World Economy
Publication Date
11-27-2022
Abstract
The economic relationship between the Gulf Cooperation Council states and the countries of East Asia has grown in significance in recent years at the expense of the European Union and the USA. Empirical analysis of GCC‐East Asian trade indices shows that East Asian states now dominate GCC trade flows and a number of GCC‐East Asian Free Trade Agreements are cementing the long‐term economic ties between the two regional blocs which are based on the complementarity of their economic structures and comparative advantage. Within East Asia Japan is increasingly having to compete with China and India for both security of energy supplies from the GCC and to supply GCC markets with their manufactured exports. Using a new approach to analysing trade relationships we utilise cointegration techniques to analyse GCC trade patterns over time. We find econometric evidence of a long‐term trade relationship between the GCC states and those of East Asia, in particular China, whose continued economic growth has allowed it to diversify its economic and political dependence away from North America and ‘look East’ for new strategic alliances.
DOI Link
ISSN
Publisher
Wiley
Disciplines
Business
Keywords
Empirical studies of trade, economic integration, economywide country studies – Asia including the Middle East, energy demand and supply
Recommended Citation
Rutledge, Emilie and Polyzos, Efstathios, "The Rise of GCC – East Asian Trade: A cointegration Approach to Analysing trade Relationships" (2022). All Works. 5497.
https://zuscholars.zu.ac.ae/works/5497
Indexed in Scopus
no
Open Access
no