Abstract
In this research, statistical models were formulated to study the effect of the health crisis arising from COVID-19 in economic markets. Economic markets experience economic crises irrespective of effects corresponding to financial contagion. This investigation was based on a mixed linear regression model that contains both fixed and random effects for the estimation of parameters and a mixed linear regression model corresponding to the generalisation of a linear model using the incorporation of random deviations and used data on the evolution of the international trade of a group of 42 countries, in order to quantify the effect that COVID-19 has had on their trade relationships and considering the average state of trade relationships before the global pandemic was declared and its subsequent effects. To measure, quantify and model the effect of COVID-19 on trade relationships, three main indicators were used: imports, exports and the sum of imports and exports, using six model specifications for the variation in foreign trade as response variables. The results suggest that trade openness, measured through the trade variable, should be modelled with a mixed model, while imports and exports can be modelled with an ordinary linear regression model. The trade relationship between countries with greater economic openness (using imports and exports as a trade variable) has a higher correlation with the country’s health index and its effect on the financial market through its main trading index; the same is true for country risk. However, regarding the association with OECD membership, the relations are only with imports.
Highlights
According to Milani [1], with the increase in international financial integration in recent years, bilateral financial links between countries can have an increasing influence on their real economies as well as openness to trade, financial markets, institutions and the sectoral composition of countries and regions
The results suggest that trade openness, measured through the trade variable, should be modelled with a mixed model, while imports and exports can be modelled with an ordinary linear regression model
By measuring the percent variation in trade relationships, imports, exports and the sum of both, it is possible to indicate the effects on the reactive capacity of countries induced by unexpected global health shocks, as in the case of the COVID-19 health crisis
Summary
According to Milani [1], with the increase in international financial integration in recent years, bilateral financial links between countries can have an increasing influence on their real economies as well as openness to trade, financial markets, institutions and the sectoral composition of countries and regions. The effects on global markets can to a greater extent be related to certain variables considered in the literature that have not been related in previous studies, such as trade openness (exports and imports), COVID-19 and country development.
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