(Press-News.org) Contact information: Cat Bartman
c.bartman@uea.ac.uk
44-016-035-93007
University of East Anglia
Study reveals impact of time differences on international trade
International time differences have a negative and economically significant impact on trade between countries, according to research published this week.
The study by Dr Edward Anderson, of the School of International Development at the University of East Anglia (UEA), found that each hour of time difference reduced international goods trade by between two and seven per cent. The effect of a five hour time difference, such as that between London and New York, was equivalent to an increase in geographical distance of between 1,000km and 3,000km.
However the findings, published in the Review of World Economics, also show that the negative impact of time differences has fallen over recent decades, which may be due to the emergence of new communication technologies. There is also evidence that the negative impact of time differences is smaller where travel and communication would be expected to be less important for trade, for example where people working on a project are based in different countries but share a common language or ethnic background.
While research has been conducted into the effects of geographical distance, it is only recently that economists have begun to investigate the impact of time differences on international trade. Dr Anderson, a lecturer in development studies, said: "The issue of whether time differences affect trade is of relevance for governments and policymakers and proposals to change time differences need to take in account potential impacts on international trade, which haven't really been considered. A lot of the debate around time zones has focused more on social aspects such as work habits, safety, making the most of daylight hours and energy use.
"One of the interesting things about globalisation is that although we have all this communication technology, physical travel is still increasing very rapidly. These new technologies are not replacing the need for actual travel, face to face contact is still important. Because business travel is still important that makes it more costly and difficult with time differences."
To determine whether time differences affected trade Dr Anderson analysed 55 years' worth of data on exports between 146 countries, details of the geographical distance between them and other factors such as whether there was a common language, a common border or a shared colonial history. He used two main measures of time difference - official time difference, which can be changed by government policy, and solar time difference, which is fixed by the geography of the country.
"Time differences have had a negative and statistically significant impact on merchandise trade, at least until recently," said Dr Anderson. "They raise the non-pecuniary costs of travel and communication, by causing jet-lag among travellers and reducing the amount of time in the normal working day in which simultaneous communication, such as telephone conversations and video-conferencing, can take place. This in turn can lead to less trade.
"If travel and simultaneous communication are important for trade, for example, by helping to establish and maintain trust, by spreading information about trading opportunities, or by helping the flow of complex knowledge among production networks based in different countries, then greater time differences should lead to less trade."
Previous research has suggested time differences promote opportunities for trade in certain business services, such as call centres and software design and development. For example, by employing teams in different time zones, people calling a helpline out of normal working hours in one time zone will automatically be transferred to a call centre in another time zone where the local time is within normal working office hours, while firms can work on product design and development around the clock, thereby reducing product turnaround times.
Dr Anderson said: "The impact of time differences could be positive or negative, depending on the sector. However, when considering overall bilateral trade, these results suggest that the negative impact of time differences on goods trade may outweigh the positive effect on trade in business services."
The findings come amid ongoing debate about time differences and changes to daylight saving time. In 2011 Russia decided not have daylight saving in the winter and reduced the number of times zones in the country from 11 to nine. However, the changes have proved unpopular and there are proposals to reverse the decision. Meanwhile Spain is considering changing time zones by an hour after a parliamentary report said it would improve eating sleeping and working habits. Some countries that span large east-west distances do not have multiple official time zones. For example China has one official time zone, based on solar time in Beijing, yet certain parts of the country such as Xinjiang, about 2,000km east of the capital, remain on unofficial local solar time and base their working day around that.
Dr Anderson said a further issue for research was whether official and solar time differences have different impacts on trade. "We might expect official time differences to matter more, on the grounds that people organise their work-day to fit the official time in their location. However, if official times differ significantly from solar times, as in China, there is evidence that people tend to follow unofficial solar time instead, which suggests that solar time differences also matter.
"Changes to official time differences do not affect solar time differences, so if it is the latter which primarily affect trade, the anticipated gains in economic efficiency may not be forthcoming. If we change the UK clocks to make more use of long evenings that would also move us closer to Europe, so we could benefit from better trade to Europe, but at the same time it takes us further away from the US and makes trading with them more difficult."
###
The study 'Time differences, communication and trade: longitude matters II' (DOI 10.1007/s10290-013-0179-9) is published in the Review of World Economics.
Study reveals impact of time differences on international trade
2013-12-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Oldest hominin DNA sequenced
2013-12-05
Oldest hominin DNA sequenced
This news release is available in German. Using novel techniques to extract and study ancient DNA researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, have determined an almost complete ...
Telemedicine brings Parkinson's care to 'anyone, anywhere'
2013-12-05
Telemedicine brings Parkinson's care to 'anyone, anywhere'
A new study shows that a neurologist in an office thousands of miles away can deliver effective specialized care to people with Parkinson's disease. For individuals with the condition ...
What a Formula 1 race does to your eardrums
2013-12-05
What a Formula 1 race does to your eardrums
Track-side noise may exceed 8,500 percent of a person's daily recommended noise exposure, according to new research presented at the 166th meeting of the Acoustical Society of America
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 2, 2013 – ...
'Valley Girl' dialect expanding to males
2013-12-05
'Valley Girl' dialect expanding to males
Uptalk is on the uptick, says new linguistics study
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 2, 2013 – The American English speech variant known as uptalk, or "Valley Girl speak" – marked by a rise in pitch at the ends of sentences – is typically ...
University of Maryland scientists develop new understanding of chlamydial disease
2013-12-05
University of Maryland scientists develop new understanding of chlamydial disease
Novel simultaneous RNA-Seq analysis tracks host/pathogen interactions
Baltimore, Md. — December 4, 2013. Investigators at the Institute for Genome Sciences at the University ...
Tripped tongues teach speech secrets
2013-12-05
Tripped tongues teach speech secrets
Say that 10 times fast, then read on: MIT researchers discuss what tongue twister-induced speech errors may tell us about our brains at a meeting of the Acoustical Society of America in San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 2, ...
Predicting ovarian cancer survival through tumor-attacking immune cells
2013-12-05
Predicting ovarian cancer survival through tumor-attacking immune cells
SEATTLE – One way to predict survival of many types of cancer is by counting the number of tumor-attacking immune cells that have migrated into the tumor in an effort to eradicate ...
Almost 600 under-16s take up smoking every day in the UK
2013-12-05
Almost 600 under-16s take up smoking every day in the UK
In London alone, the daily tally is 67 -- more than 2 classrooms-full
In London alone, the daily tally is 67 - more than two classrooms-full, the calculations indicate.
National figures on smoking ...
1 in 7 vets suffers burn-out within 10 years of qualifying
2013-12-05
1 in 7 vets suffers burn-out within 10 years of qualifying
Women vets fare worse: almost 1 in 5 is burnt-out within 5 years
Women are likely to burn-out even faster than their male colleagues, with almost one in five burnt-out within five years of graduating, ...
New fossil species found in Mozambique reveals new data on ancient mammal relatives
2013-12-05
New fossil species found in Mozambique reveals new data on ancient mammal relatives
In the remote province of Niassa, Mozambique, a new species and genus of fossil vertebrate was found. The species is a distant relative of living mammals and is approximately 256 million ...