Trade and Exporting Over the Cycle

Working Paper: NBER ID: w26212

Authors: George A. Alessandria; Horag Choi

Abstract: We study how international trade and the exporting decisions of establishments affect establishment creation over the business cycle in a general equilibrium model. The model captures two key features of establishment and exporter dynamics: i) new establishments start small and grow over time and ii) exporters tend to be bigger and more productive than non-exporters and remain so for some time. When the cost of creating establishments fluctuates with aggregate productivity, we find the model can generate procyclical fluctuations in the stock of domestic establishments and importers similar to the data. Without international trade, entry is weakly countercyclical and too smooth. The model also generates fluctuations in the stock of importers, exporters, and domestic establishments of similar magnitude to those in the data. With an entry margin, we also find that output is hump-shaped following a productivity shock since investments in creating establishments and exporters generate an incentive to delay accumulating physical capital. This hump is stronger in an open economy model and strongly increases the value of creating new establishments in a boom.

Keywords: international trade; establishment creation; business cycle

JEL Codes: E32; F41


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
international trade (F19)establishment creation (L26)
exporting decisions (F10)establishment creation (L26)
fluctuations in the stock of domestic establishments (E32)establishment creation (L26)
fluctuations in the stock of importers (F32)establishment creation (L26)
cost of creating establishments (L26)establishment creation (L26)
productivity shocks (O49)dynamics of entry and exporting decisions (F10)
eliminating international borrowing and lending (F34)volatility in the stock of establishments (E32)

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