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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'import'

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Frequently Occurring Concepts within this Search

Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 40

Center for Economic Studies - 30

North American Industry Classification System - 27

Longitudinal Business Database - 25

Harmonized System - 23

National Science Foundation - 22

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 21

Standard Industrial Classification - 21

Ordinary Least Squares - 19

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 18

National Bureau of Economic Research - 17

World Bank - 17

Customs and Border Protection - 15

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 15

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 14

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 13

Census of Manufactures - 12

Federal Reserve System - 11

World Trade Organization - 11

Total Factor Productivity - 11

Disclosure Review Board - 11

Board of Governors - 10

Federal Reserve Bank - 10

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 10

Michigan Institute for Data Science - 10

Employer Identification Numbers - 10

North American Free Trade Agreement - 9

Cobb-Douglas - 9

Foreign Direct Investment - 9

Economic Census - 9

Annual Survey of Manufactures - 9

Longitudinal Research Database - 9

European Union - 8

Business Register - 8

International Trade Commission - 7

Heckscher-Ohlin - 6

Journal of International Economics - 6

United Nations - 5

Internal Revenue Service - 5

County Business Patterns - 5

Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

University of Chicago - 5

Special Sworn Status - 5

Harvard University - 5

Research Data Center - 5

Department of Agriculture - 4

Consumer Expenditure Survey - 4

Census Bureau Business Register - 4

Federal Register - 4

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 4

Postal Service - 4

Department of Economics - 4

Code of Federal Regulations - 4

University of Michigan - 4

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 4

Quarterly Journal of Economics - 4

American Economic Review - 4

Commodity Flow Survey - 3

Standard Statistical Establishment List - 3

Company Organization Survey - 3

Wholesale Trade - 3

Service Annual Survey - 3

American Economic Association - 3

Yale University - 3

Statistics Canada - 3

Department of Labor - 3

Retirement History Survey - 3

Georgetown University - 3

Michigan Institute for Teaching and Research in Economics - 3

North American Industry Classi - 3

Review of Economics and Statistics - 3

Journal of Political Economy - 3

State Energy Data System - 3

Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies - 3

Journal of Economic Literature - 3

Regional Economic Information System - 3

Department of Commerce - 3

export - 68

exporter - 46

market - 34

importer - 32

manufacturing - 32

trading - 31

exporting - 30

multinational - 26

exported - 25

tariff - 25

custom - 24

imported - 23

shipment - 22

international trade - 22

gdp - 22

foreign - 21

industrial - 21

supplier - 20

importing - 20

macroeconomic - 17

sale - 16

production - 15

good - 13

firms export - 13

commodity - 13

foreign trade - 13

trader - 12

manufacturer - 12

produce - 12

product - 11

monopolistic - 11

globalization - 11

firms trade - 11

wholesale - 11

subsidiary - 10

sourcing - 10

trade models - 10

spillover - 9

econometric - 9

labor - 9

firms import - 9

sector - 8

export market - 8

monopolistically - 8

endogeneity - 8

demand - 7

price - 7

exporters multinationals - 7

exporting firms - 7

recession - 7

country - 7

firms exporting - 7

economist - 6

enterprise - 6

multinational firms - 6

economically - 6

growth - 6

buyer - 6

factory - 6

revenue - 5

consumer - 5

downstream - 5

competitor - 5

employ - 5

company - 5

technological - 5

export growth - 5

exogeneity - 5

econometrician - 5

regulatory - 4

trade costs - 4

oligopolistic - 4

competitiveness - 4

retailer - 4

employed - 4

job - 4

workforce - 4

innovation - 4

investment - 4

merchandise - 4

externality - 4

substitute - 4

commerce - 4

inflation - 3

welfare - 3

purchase - 3

regressors - 3

merger - 3

oligopoly - 3

worker - 3

warehousing - 3

occupation - 3

inventory - 3

specialization - 3

profit - 3

cost - 3

textile - 3

report - 3

heterogeneity - 3

endogenous - 3

immigrant - 3

manufacturing industries - 3

agriculture - 3

Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 69


  • Working Paper

    Accounting for the New Gains from Trade Liberalization

    March 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-14

    We measure the "new" gains from trade reaped by Canada as a result of the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement (CUSFTA). We think of the "new" gains from trade of a country as all welfare effects pertaining to changes in the set of firms serving that country as emphasized in the so-called "new" trade literature. To this end, we first develop an exact decomposition of the gains from trade which separates "traditional" and "new" gains. We then apply this decomposition using Canadian and US micro data and find that the "new" welfare effects of CUSFTA on Canada were negative.
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  • Working Paper

    Learning and the Value of Relationships in International Trade

    February 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-11

    How valuable are long-term supplier relationships? To address this question, this paper explores relationships between U.S. importers and their suppliers abroad. We establish several facts: almost half of U.S. imports involve relationships three years or older, relationship survival and traded quantity increase as a relationship ages, and long-term relationships were more resilient in the 2008-09 financial crisis. We present a model of importer learning and calibrate it using our data. We estimate large differences in the value of relationships across countries. Counterfactuals show that relationships are central to trade dynamics.
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  • Working Paper

    Cheap Imports and the Loss of U.S. Manufacturing Jobs

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-05

    This paper examines the role of international trade, and specifically imports from low-wage countries, in determining patterns of job loss in U.S. manufacturing industries between 1992 and 2007. Motivated by intuitions from factor-proportions-inspired work on offshoring and heterogeneous firms in trade, we build industry-level measures of import competition. Combining worker data from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics dataset, detailed establishment information from the Census of Manufactures, and transaction-level trade data, we find that rising import competition from China and other developing economies increases the likelihood of job loss among manufacturing workers with less than a high school degree; it is not significantly related to job losses for workers with at least a college degree.
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  • Working Paper

    Task Trade and the Wage Effects of Import Competition

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-03

    Do job characteristics modulate the relationship between import competition and the wages of workers who perform those jobs? This paper tests the claim that workers in occupations featuring highly routine tasks will be more vulnerable to low-wage country import competition. Using data from the US Census Bureau, we construct a pooled cross-section (1990, 2000, and 2007) of more than 1.6 million individuals linked to the establishment in which they work. Occupational measures of vulnerability to trade competition ' routineness, analytic complexity, and interpersonal interaction on the job ' are constructed using O*NET data. The linked employer-employee data allow us to model the effect of low-wage import competition on the wages of workers with different occupational characteristics. Our results show that low-wage country import competition is associated with lower wages for US workers holding jobs that are highly routine and less complex. For workers holding nonroutine and highly complex jobs, increased import competition is associated with higher wages. Finally, workers in occupations with the highest and lowest levels of interpersonal interaction see higher wages, while workers with medium-low levels of interpersonal interaction suffer lower wages with increased low-wage import competition. These findings demonstrate the importance of accounting for occupational characteristics to more fully understand the relationship between trade and wages, and suggest ways in which task trade vulnerable occupations can disadvantage workers even when their jobs remain onshore.
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  • Working Paper

    Plant Exit and U.S. Imports from Low-Wage Countries

    January 2016

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-16-02

    Over the past twenty years, imports to the U.S. from low-wage countries have increased dramatically. In this paper we examine how low-wage country import competition in the U.S. influences the probability of manufacturing establishment closure. Confidential data from the U.S. Bureau of the Census are used to track all manufacturing establishments between 1992 and 2007. These data are linked to measures of import competition built from individual trade transactions. Controlling for a variety of plant and firm covariates, we show that low-wage import competition has played a significant role in manufacturing plant exit. Analysis employs fixed effects panel models running across three periods: the first plant-level panels examining trade and exit for the U.S. economy. Our results appear robust to concerns regarding endogeneity.
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  • Working Paper

    Input Linkages and the Transmission of Shocks: Firm-Level Evidence from the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake

    September 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-28

    Using novel firm-level microdata and leveraging a natural experiment, this paper provides causal evidence for the role of trade and multinational firms in the cross-country transmission of shocks. Foreign multinational affiliates in the U.S. exhibit substantial intermediate input linkages with their source country. The scope for these linkages to generate cross-country spillovers in the domestic market depends on the elasticity of substitution with respect to other inputs. Using the 2011 Tohoku earthquake as an exogenous shock, we estimate this elasticity for those firms most reliant on Japanese imported inputs: the U.S. affiliates of Japanese multinationals. These firms suffered large drops in U.S. output in the months following the shock, roughly one-for-one with the drop in imports and consistent with a Leontief relationship between imported and domestic inputs. Structural estimates of the production function for these firms yield disaggregated production elasticities that are similarly low. Our results suggest that global supply chains are sufficiently rigid to play an important role in the cross-country transmission of shocks.
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  • Working Paper

    The Determinants of Quality Specialization

    June 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-15

    A growing literature suggests that high-income countries export high-quality goods. Two hypotheses may explain such specialization, with different implications for welfare, inequality, and trade policy. Fajgelbaum, Grossman, and Helpman (2011) formalize the Linder hypothesis that home demand determines the pattern of specialization and therefore predict that high-income locations export high-quality products. The factor-proportions model also predicts that skill abundant, high-income locations export skill intensive, high-quality products. Prior empirical evidence does not separate these explanations. I develop a model that nests both hypotheses and employ microdata on US manufacturing plants' shipments and factor inputs to quantify the two mechanisms' roles in quality specialization across US cities. Home-market demand explains at least as much of the relationship between income and quality as differences in factor usage.
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  • Working Paper

    Identifying Foreign Suppliers in U.S. Merchandise Import Transactions

    April 2015

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-15-11

    The availability of international trade transactions data capturing individual relationships between buyers and suppliers permits the answering of numerous new questions governing the economic activity of traders. In this paper, we explore the reliability of two-sided firm trade transactions data sourced from the United States by comparing the number of foreign suppliers from U.S. merchandise import transaction data to origin-country data. We find that the statistic derived from the origin-country data, on average, tends to be 20 percent lower than using the raw U.S. data. Guided by this finding, we propose and implement a set of methods that are capable of aligning the counts more closely from these two different data sources. Overall, our analysis presents broad support for the use of U.S. merchandise import transactions data to study buyer-supplier relationships in international trade.
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  • Working Paper

    THE MARGINS OF GLOBAL SOURCING: THEORY AND EVIDENCE FROM U.S. FIRMS

    December 2014

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-47

    This paper studies the extensive and intensive margins of firms' global sourcing decisions. We develop a quantifiable multi-country sourcing model in which heterogeneous firms self-select into importing based on their productivity and country-specific variables. The model delivers a simple closed-form solution for firm profits as a function of the countries from which a firm imports, as well as those countries' characteristics. In contrast to canonical models of exporting in which firm profits are additively separable across exporting markets, we show that global sourcing decisions naturally interact through the firm's cost function. In particular, the marginal change in profits from adding a country to the firm's set of potential sourcing locations depends on the number and characteristics of other countries in the set. Still, under plausible parametric restrictions, selection into importing features complementarity across markets and firms' sourcing strategies follow a hierarchical structure analogous to the one predicted by exporting models. Our quantitative analysis exploits these complementarities to distinguish between a country's potential as a marginal cost-reducing source of inputs and the fixed cost associated with sourcing from this country. Counterfactual exercises suggest that a shock to the potential benefits of sourcing from a country leads to significant and heterogeneous changes in sourcing across both countries and firms.
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  • Working Paper

    Buyer-Seller Relationships in International Trade: Do Your Neighbors Matter?

    October 2014

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-44

    Using confidential U.S. customs data on trade transactions between U.S. importers and Bangladeshi exporters between 2002 and 2009, and information on the geographic location of Bangladeshi exporters, we show that the presence of neighboring exporters that previously transacted with a U.S. importer is associated with a greater likelihood of matching with the same U.S. importer for the first time. This suggests a role for business networks among trading firms in generating exporter-importer matches. Our research design also allows us to isolate potential gains from neighborhood exporter presence that are partner-specific, from overall gains previously documented in the literature.
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