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Papers Containing Keywords(s): 'import'

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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

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

United Nations - 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 41 through 50 of 69


  • Working Paper

    "It's Not You, It's Me": Breakup In U.S.-China Trade Relationships

    February 2014

    Authors: Ryan Monarch

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-14-08

    This paper uses confidential U.S. Customs data on U.S. importers and their Chinese exporters toinvestigate the frictions from changing exporting partners. High costs from switching partners can affect the efficiency of buyer-supplier matches by impeding the movement of importers from high to lower cost exporters. I test the significance of this channel using U.S. import data, which identifies firms on both sides (U.S. and foreign) of an international trade relationship, the location of the foreign supplier, and values and quantities for the universe of U.S. import transactions. Using transactions with China from 2003-2008, I find evidence suggesting that barriers to switching exporters are considerable: 45% of arm's-length importers maintain their partner from one year to the next, and one-third of all switching importers remain in the same city as their original partner. In addition, importers paying the highest prices are the most likely to change their exporting partner. Guided by these empirical regularities, I propose and structurally estimate a dynamic discrete choice model of exporter choice, embedded in a heterogeneous firm model of international trade. In the model, importing firms choose a future partner using information for each choice, but are subject to partner and location-specific costs if they decide to switch their current partner. Structural estimates of switching costs are large, and heterogeneous across industries. For the random sample of 50 industries I use, halving switching costs shrinks the fraction of importers remaining with their partner from 57% to 18%, and this improvement in match efficiency leads to a 12.5% decrease in the U.S.-China Import Price Index.
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  • Working Paper

    IMPORTING, EXPORTING AND FIRM-LEVEL EMPLOYMENT VOLATILITY

    June 2013

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-13-31

    In this paper, we use detailed trade and transactions data for the U.S. manufacturing sector to empirically analyze the direction and magnitude of the association between firm-level exposure to trade and the volatility of employment growth. We find that, relative to purely domestic firms, firms that only export and firms that both export and import are less volatile, whereas firms that only import are more volatile. The positive relationship between importing and volatility is driven mainly by firms that switch in and out of importing. We also document a significant degree of heterogeneity across trading firms in terms of the duration of time and intensity with which firms trade, the number and type of products they trade and the number and characteristics of their trading partners. We find these factors to play an important role in explaining the differential impact of trading on employment volatility experienced by these firms.
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  • Working Paper

    INTRA-FIRM TRADE AND PRODUCT CONTRACTIBILITY

    March 2013

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-13-12

    This paper examines the determinants of intra-firm trade in U.S. imports using detailed country-product data. We create a new measure of product contractibility based on the degree of intermediation in international trade for the product. We find important roles for the interaction of country and product characteristics in determining intra-firm trade shares. Intra- firm trade is high for products with low levels of contractibility sourced from countries with weak governance, for skill-intensive products from skill-scarce countries, and for capital-intensive products from capital-abundant countries.
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  • Working Paper

    Decomposing Aggregate Trade Flows: New Evidence from U.S. Traders

    September 2012

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-12-17

    Using firm-level data on export transactions, we uncover a rich set of results about the extensive margins of exporting and exporter responses during periods of global downturns. We perform our analysis with respect to firm size, age, ownership status, and sector to emphasize the role of firm heterogeneity. We uncover a larger role for firm entry and exit in changes in annual export flows of single-unit, smaller, and younger firms. Young, small firms perform best during both periods of crises as well as non-crises periods. We also decompose the margins of U.S. imports at the U.S. importer, foreign supplier, and U.S. importer-foreign supplier pair levels. While export flows are closely correlated with global business cycles, import flows more closely approximate U.S. economic cycles. Additionally, both pair and foreign supplier flows are far more volatile than U.S. import flows, that is, U.S. importer-foreign supplier matches experience more churning on average than do either U.S. importers or foreign suppliers.
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  • Working Paper

    Wholesalers and Retailers in U.S. Trade (Long Version)

    February 2012

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-12-03

    International trade models typically assume that producers in one country trade directly with final consumers in another. In reality, of course, trade can involve long chains of potentially independent actors who move goods through wholesale and retail distribution networks. These networks likely affect the magnitude and nature of trade frictions and hence both the pattern of trade and its welfare gains. To promote further understanding of the means by which goods move across borders, this paper examines the extent to which U.S. exports and imports flow through wholesalers and retailers versus producing and consuming firms.
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  • Working Paper

    Tariff Pass-Through, Firm Heterogeneity and Product Quality

    October 2010

    Authors: Zhi George Yu

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-37

    Previous studies on tariff pass-through were constrained at the industry level. This paper is the first attempt to explore tariff pass-through at the firm level, and to investigate how it depends on firm heterogeneity in productivity and product differentiation in quality. Using an extended version of the Melitz and Ottaviano (2008) model, I show that exporting firms absorb tariff changes by adjusting both their markups and product quality, which leads to an incomplete tariff pass-through. Moreover, tariff absorption elasticity negatively depends on firm productivity for quality differentiated goods, but positively depends on firm productivity for quality homogeneous goods. Using the U.S. transaction level export data and plant-level manufacturing data, I find evidence for these predictions. The firm-level tariff absorption elasticity is 0.87 on average. All products in the sample on average fit the definition of quality differentiated goods, and the tariff absorption elasticity is indeed higher for low productivity firms (1.27) and lower for high productivity firms (0.44). Dividing all products into quality homogeneous goods and quality differentiated goods in terms of various criteria also results in estimates consistent with model predictions for quality differentiated goods.
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  • Working Paper

    Pollution Havens and the Trade in Toxic Chemicals: Evidence from U.S. Trade Flows

    June 2010

    Authors: John Tang

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-12

    Does increased environmental protection decrease the emission of pollutants or merely displace them? Using newly available trade data, this study examines the flows of a panel of chemicals designated as toxic by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). Estimates from a differences-in-differences model indicate a significant increase in net imports when a chemical is listed on TRI, which suggests production offshoring. Furthermore, I find that increased imports due to this 'pollution haven effect' are sourced disproportionately from poorer countries, which are likely to have lower environmental protection standards. At the same time, I observe the bulk of American trade in toxic chemicals occurs with other wealthy countries, which may be attributed to the capital intensity of chemical production.
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  • Working Paper

    Globalization and Price Dispersion: Evidence from U.S. Trade Flows

    March 2010

    Authors: John Tang

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-10-07

    Historically, the integration of international markets has corresponded with decreasing prices for traded goods due to higher competition among suppliers, scale economies, and consumption demand. In recent years, product differentiation and multinational firm pricing behavior across markets and between suppliers make it difficult to assess the degree to which this still occurs. Using a confidential panel dataset comprising the universe of U.S. import trade transactions between 1992 and 2007, this paper explores the change in prices for imported commodities across American trade partners. Overall price dispersion appears to decline, albeit unevenly, over time; nevertheless, there is considerable heterogeneity within commodity groups, geographic regions, and income levels, which may owe to increased product and quality differentiation within commodity categories. Unusually, after controlling for gravity trade factors, trade openness and extensive measures of globalization are positively associated with price dispersion, which suggests a more disaggregated approach both at the commodity and firm level to account for these differences.
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  • Working Paper

    A Concordance Between Ten-Digit U.S. Harmonized System Codes and SIC/NAICS Product Classes and Industries

    November 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-41

    This paper provides and describes concordances between the ten-digit Harmonized System (HS) categories used to classify products in U.S. international trade and the four-digit SIC and six-digit NAICS industries that cover the years 1989 to 2006. We also provide concordances between ten- digit HS codes and the five-digit SIC and seven-digit NAICS product classes used to classify U.S. manufacturing production. Finally, we briefly describe how these concordances might be applied in current empirical international trade research.
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  • Working Paper

    U.S. Trade in Toxics: The Case of Chlorodifluoromethane (HCFC-22)

    September 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-29

    This paper explores whether environmental regulation affects where pollution-intensive goods are produced. Here we examine chlorodifluoromethane (HCFC-22), a chemical designated as toxic in 1994 by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). Trends show a decline in the number of domestic producers of this chemical, a decline in the number of manufacturing facilities using it, and an increase in the number (and share) of facilities claiming to import it. Transaction-level trade data show an increase in the import of HCFC-22 imports since its TRI listing ' an increase that is faster than that of all non-TRI listed chemicals. This is suggestive of a pollution haven effect. Meanwhile, we find that the vast majority of U.S. imports of HCFC-22 come from OECD countries. However, an increase in the share of imports from non-OECD countries since the chemical's listing suggests a shift of production to countries with more lax environmental standards. While the findings here are suggestive of regulatory effects, more rigorous analyses are needed to rule out other possible explanations.
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