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SMU SOE Seminar Series (December 12, 2025): Geopolitical Barriers to Globalization

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TOPIC:

GEOPOLITICAL BARRIERS TO GLOBALIZATION

ABSTRACT

This paper estimates and quantifies how geopolitical alignment shapes global trade across three distinct eras: the ColdWar, hyper-globalization, and contemporary fragmentation. We construct a novel measure of bilateral alignment using large language models to compile and analyze 833,485 political events spanning 193 countries from 1950 to 2024. Our analysis reveals that trade flows systematically track geopolitical alignment in both bilateral relationships and aggregate patterns. Using local projections within a gravity framework, we estimate that a one-standard-deviation improvement in geopolitical alignment increases bilateral trade by 20 percent over ten years. Integrating these elasticities into a quantitative general equilibrium model, we find that deteriorating geopolitical relations have reduced global trade by 7 percentage points between 1995 and 2020. Our findings provide empirical benchmarks for evaluating the costs of geopolitical fragmentation in an era of renewed great power competition.

Keywords: Geopolitical Alignment, International Trade, Fragmentation, Gravity Model, Large Language Models.

JEL: F14, F15, F51, C55.

Click here to view the paper.

PRESENTER

Wei Xiang
University of Michigan

RESEARCH FIELDS

Macroeconomics
International Trade
Environmental Economics

DATE:

12 December 2025 (Friday)

TIME:

4:00pm - 5:30pm

VENUE:

Meeting Room 5.1, Level 5
School of Economics
Singapore Management University
90 Stamford Road
Singapore 178903

 
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