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Papers Containing Tag(s): 'Harmonized System'

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Longitudinal Firm Trade Transactions Database - 26

North American Industry Classification System - 25

Center for Economic Studies - 21

Ordinary Least Squares - 18

National Science Foundation - 17

Bureau of Economic Analysis - 16

National Bureau of Economic Research - 15

Standard Industrial Classification - 15

Longitudinal Business Database - 15

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development - 13

Bureau of Labor Statistics - 13

Customs and Border Protection - 11

Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board - 10

Business Register - 8

International Trade Commission - 8

Census of Manufactures - 7

Census of Manufacturing Firms - 7

Internal Revenue Service - 7

Economic Census - 7

Total Factor Productivity - 7

Federal Reserve Bank - 6

Federal Reserve System - 6

United Nations - 6

Federal Statistical Research Data Center - 6

Disclosure Review Board - 6

Michigan Institute for Data Science - 6

Heckscher-Ohlin - 6

International Standard Industrial Classification - 6

World Bank - 6

Federal Register - 5

World Trade Organization - 5

Business Dynamics Statistics - 5

Generalized Method of Moments - 5

North American Industry Classi - 5

Postal Service - 5

North American Free Trade Agreement - 5

Chicago Census Research Data Center - 5

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European Union - 4

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Census Bureau Business Register - 4

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Employer Identification Numbers - 4

Census Bureau Longitudinal Business Database - 4

University of Chicago - 4

Special Sworn Status - 4

Fabricated Metal Products - 3

Office of Management and Budget - 3

Harvard University - 3

University of Michigan - 3

Code of Federal Regulations - 3

Herfindahl Hirschman Index - 3

UC Berkeley - 3

Public Administration - 3

American Economic Association - 3

Statistics Canada - 3

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Establishment Micro Properties - 3

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Patent and Trademark Office - 3

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Journal of Economic Literature - 3

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Viewing papers 31 through 40 of 40


  • 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

    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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  • Working Paper

    Multi-Product Firms and Trade Liberalization

    August 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-21

    This paper develops a general equilibrium model of international trade that features selection across firms, products and countries. Firms' export decisions depend on a combination of firm 'productivity' and firm-product-country 'consumer tastes', both of which are stochastic and unknown prior to the payment of a sunk cost of entry. Higher-productivity firms export a wider range of products to a larger set of countries than lower-productivity firms. Trade liberalization induces endogenous reallocations of resources that foster productivity growth both within and across firms. Empirically, we find key implications of the model to be consistent with U.S. trade data.
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  • Working Paper

    The Margins of U.S. Trade (Long Version)

    August 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-18

    Recent research in international trade emphasizes the importance of firms extensive margins for understanding overall patterns of trade as well as how firms respond to specific events such as trade liberalization. In this paper, we use detailed U.S. trade statistics to provide a broad overview of how the margins of trade contribute to variation in U.S. imports and exports across trading partners, types of trade (i.e., arm's-length versus related-party) and both short and long time horizons. Among other results, we highlight the differential behavior of related-party and arm's-length trade in response to the 1997 Asian financial crisis.
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  • Working Paper

    Concording U.S. Harmonized System Categories Over Time

    May 2009

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-09-11

    This paper: outlines an algorithm for concording U.S. ten-digit Harmonized System export and import codes over time; describes the concordances we construct for 1989 to 2004; and provides Stata code that can be used to construct similar concordances for arbitrary beginning and ending years from 1989 to 2007.
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  • Working Paper

    Transfer Pricing by U.S.-Based Multinational Firms

    September 2008

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-08-29

    This paper examines how prices set by multinational firms vary across arm's-length and related party customers. Comparing prices within firms, products, destination countries, modes of transport and month, we find that the prices U.S. exporters set for their arm's-length customers are substantially larger than the prices recorded for related-parties. This price wedge is smaller for commodities than for differentiated goods, is increasing in firm size and firm export share, and is greater for goods sent to countries with lower corporate tax rates and higher tariffs. We also find that changes in exchange rates have differential effects on arm's-length and related-party prices; an appreciation of the dollar reduces the difference between the prices.
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  • Working Paper

    Firms in International Trade

    April 2007

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-07-14

    Standard models of international trade devote little attention to firms. Yet of the 5.5 million firms operating in the United States in 2000, just 4 percent engaged in exporting, and the top 10 percent of these exporting firms accounted for 96 percent of U.S. exports. Since the mid 1990s, a large number of empirical studies have provided a wealth of information about the important role that firms play in mediating countries' imports and exports. This research, based on micro datasets that track countries' production and trade at the firm level, demonstrates that trading firms differ substantially from firms that solely serve the domestic market. Across a wide range of countries and industries, exporters have been shown to be larger, more productive, more skill- and capital-intensive, and to pay higher wages than non-trading firms.2 Furthermore, these differences exist even before exporting begins. The ex ante 'superiority' of exporters suggests self-selection: exporters are more productive, not as a result of exporting, but because only the most productive firms are able to overcome the costs of entering export markets. It is precisely this sort of microeconomic heterogeneity that grants firms the ability to influence macroeconomic outcomes. When trade policy barriers fall or transportation costs decline, high-productivity exporting firms survive and grow while lower-productivity non-exporting firms are more likely to fail. This reallocation of economic activity across firms raises aggregate productivity and provides a new source of welfare gains from trade. Confronting the challenges posed by the analysis of micro data has shifted the focus of the international trade field from countries and industries towards firms and products. We highlight these challenges with a detailed analysis of how trading firms differ from non-trading firms in the United States. We show how these differences serve as the foundation of a series of recent heterogeneous-firm models that offer new insights into the causes and consequences of international trade. We then introduce a new set of stylized facts that emerge from analysis of recently available U.S. customs data. These transaction-level trade data track all of the products imported and exported by the U.S. firms to all of its trading partners from 1992 to 2000. They show that the extensive margins of trade ' that is, the number of products firms trade as well as the number of countries they trade with ' are central to understanding the well-known role of distance in dampening aggregate trade flows. We conclude with suggestions for further theoretical and empirical research.
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  • Working Paper

    Impacts of Trade on Wage Inequality in Los Angeles: Analysis Using Matched Employer-Employee Data

    April 2006

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-06-12

    Over the past twenty-five years, earnings inequality has risen dramatically in the US, reversing trends of the preceding half-century. Growing inequality is closely tied to globalization and trade through the arguments of Heckscher-Ohlin. However, with only few exceptions, empirical studies fail to show that trade is the primary determinant of shifts in relative wages. We argue that lack of empirical support for the trade-inequality connection results from the use of poor proxies for worker skill and the failure to control for other worker characteristics and plant characteristics that impact wages. We remedy these problems by developing a matched employer-employee database linking the Decennial Household Census (individual worker records) and the Longitudinal Research Database (individual manufacturing establishment records) for the Los Angeles CMSA in 1990 and 2000. Our results show that trade has a significant impact on wage inequality, pushing down the wages of the less-skilled while allowing more highly skilled workers to benefit from exports. That impact has increased through the 1990s, swamping the influence of skill-biased technical change in 2000. Further, the negative effect of trade on the wages of the less-skilled has moved up the skill distribution over time. This suggests that over the long-run, increasing levels of education may not insulate more skilled workers within developed economies from the impacts of trade.
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  • Working Paper

    Survival of the Best Fit: Competition from Low Wage Countries and the (Uneven) Growth of U.S. Manufacturing Plants

    October 2002

    Working Paper Number:

    CES-02-22

    We examine the relationship between import competition from low wage countries and the reallocation of US manufacturing from 1977 to 1997. Both employment and output growth are slower for plants that face higher levels of low wage import competition in their industry. As a result, US manufacturing is reallocated over time towards industries that are more capital and skill intensive. Differential growth is driven by a combination of increased plant failure rates and slower growth of surviving plants. Within industries, low wage import competition has the strongest effects on the least capital and skill intensive plants. Surviving plants that switch industries move into more capital and skill intensive sectors when they face low wage competition.
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