Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP9681
Authors: Andrew B. Bernard; Andreas Moxnes; Karen Helene Ulltveit-Moe
Abstract: Empirical studies of firms within industries consistently report substantial heterogeneity in measures of performance such as size and productivity. This paper explores the consequences of joint heterogeneity on the supply side (sellers) and the demand side (buyers) in international trade using a novel transaction-level dataset from Norway. Domestic exporters as well as foreign importers are explicitly identified in each transaction to every destination. The buyer-seller linked data reveal a number of new stylized facts on the distributions of buyers per exporter and exporters per buyer, the matching among sellers and buyers and the variation of buyer dispersion across destinations. The paper develops a model of trade with heterogeneous importers as well as heterogeneous exporters where matches are subject to a relation-specific fixed cost. The model matches the stylized facts and generates new testable predictions emphasizing the importance of importer heterogeneity in explaining trade patterns.
Keywords: Exporters; Heterogeneous Firms; Importers; Trade Elasticity
JEL Codes: F10; F12; F14
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
buyer dispersion (D39) | dispersion of exports (F14) |
dispersion of exports (F14) | buyer productivity (O49) |
buyer heterogeneity (D11) | trade elasticity (H30) |
buyer dispersion (D39) | export responsiveness to demand shocks (F41) |
demand shock (E00) | total firm-level exports (F10) |
demand shock (E00) | marginal export flow (F14) |