TY - JOUR AU - Bernard,Andrew B. AU - Jensen,J. Bradford AU - Schott,Peter K. TI - Factor Price Equality and the Economies of the United States JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 8068 PY - 2001 Y2 - January 2001 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8068 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8068.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Andrew B. Bernard Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth 100 Tuck Hall Hanover, NH 03755 Tel: 603/646-0302 Fax: 603/646-0995 E-Mail: Andrew.B.Bernard@dartmouth.edu J. Bradford Jensen McDonough School of Business Georgetown University Washington, DC 20057 Tel: 202/687-3767 E-Mail: jbj24@georgetown.edu Peter K. Schott Yale School of Management 135 Prospect Street New Haven, CT 06520-8200 Tel: 203/436-4260 Fax: 203/432-6974 E-Mail: peter.schott@yale.edu AB - Do New York and Nashville face the same pressures from increased trade? This paper considers the role of international trade in shaping the product mix and relative wages for regions within the US. Using the predictions from a Heckscher-Ohlin trade model, we ask whether all the regions in the US face the same relative factor prices. Using the production side of the HO model, we derive a general test of relative factor price equality that is robust to unobserved regional productivity differences, unobserved regional factor quality differences, and variations in production technology across industries. Using data from 1972-1992, we reject the the hypothesis that all regions face the same relative factor prices in favor of an alternative with at least three distinct factor price cones. Sort regions into cones with similar relative factor prices, we find that industry mix varies systematically across the groups. Regions that switch cones over time have more churning of industries. ER -