The role of China as a trading partner of sub-Saharan Africa is assessed using data on bilateral trade from the International Monetary Fund (1999-2007) and a gravity model. Trade with China is found to affect the intra-African market in different ways at different levels of China-Africa exports. Interaction variables are used to disentangle two opposite patterns: sub-Saharan Africa's exports to China have a negative effect on intra-African trade at higher levels of the trade between China and sub-Saharan Africa and a positive effect at lower levels. Oil-exporting countries, China's biggest African trading partners, tend to isolate themselves from the internal African market as their exports to China increase. Conversely, a rise in exports to China from non-oil-exporting countries increases intra-African trade, probably due to a wealth effect. Intra-African market performance is briefly analyzed as a robustness check on the data. The results are interesting, especially those concerning the differences in trade determinants between oil-exporting and non-oil-exporting sub-Saharan countries.
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Open Univ Tanzania, Ctr Econ & Community Econ Dev, Dar Es Salaam, TanzaniaOpen Univ Tanzania, Ctr Econ & Community Econ Dev, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
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Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Social Sci, Cultural & Heritage Tourism, Durban, South AfricaUniv KwaZulu Natal, Sch Social Sci, Cultural & Heritage Tourism, Durban, South Africa
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Univ Cape Town, Grad Sch Business, Cape Town, South AfricaUniv Cape Town, Grad Sch Business, Cape Town, South Africa
Andrews, Luke R. J.
Luiz, John M.
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Univ Sussex, Business Sch, Dept Strategy & Mkt, Brighton, England
Univ Cape Town, Grad Sch Business, Cape Town, South AfricaUniv Cape Town, Grad Sch Business, Cape Town, South Africa