This paper uses a difference-in-differences approach to test the hypothesis that the increase in the per-shipment costs of imports from Japan due to the Fukushima disaster in 2011 lead to an increase in the lumpiness of imports from Japan. Using China and the USA as control groups it is found that the Fukushima trade cost shock reduced the average number of import transactions per year at the firm-good level and, therefore, increased the degree of lumpiness of imports from Japan
This paper provides new evidence on export price elasticities by analyzing the cases of China, Franc...
Using novel firm-level microdata and leveraging a natural experiment, this pa-per provides causal ev...
The first essay addresses the structure of sunk export entry costs. Heterogeneous firm models of int...
This paper uses a difference-in-differences approach to test the hypothesis that the increase in the...
Using detailed U.S. and Spanish export data, we document that trade costs of a per-shipment nature a...
This study investigates how exporters respond to an exogenous shock, using the 2012 customer boycott...
Between 1992 and 2002, the Japanese Import Price Index registered a decline of almost 9 percent and ...
This paper introduces a new dataset of commodity-specific, bilateral import data for four large Asia...
A striking feature of many financial crises is the collapse of exports relative to output. In the 20...
This study empirically examines the ripple effect of demand shocks on upstream suppliers in global v...
The paradox in Japan's external trade arises from the structure of Japan's international trade, that...
This paper discusses the per-capita consumption of imports aspect of international trade. A re...
This study highlights the role of departure months of shipping and the discrepancies in mirror trade...
This paper provides a sectoral examination of the impact of trade policies and custom valuation proc...
This paper uses the methodology developed in Kehoe and Ruhl (2013) to measure the change in the exte...
This paper provides new evidence on export price elasticities by analyzing the cases of China, Franc...
Using novel firm-level microdata and leveraging a natural experiment, this pa-per provides causal ev...
The first essay addresses the structure of sunk export entry costs. Heterogeneous firm models of int...
This paper uses a difference-in-differences approach to test the hypothesis that the increase in the...
Using detailed U.S. and Spanish export data, we document that trade costs of a per-shipment nature a...
This study investigates how exporters respond to an exogenous shock, using the 2012 customer boycott...
Between 1992 and 2002, the Japanese Import Price Index registered a decline of almost 9 percent and ...
This paper introduces a new dataset of commodity-specific, bilateral import data for four large Asia...
A striking feature of many financial crises is the collapse of exports relative to output. In the 20...
This study empirically examines the ripple effect of demand shocks on upstream suppliers in global v...
The paradox in Japan's external trade arises from the structure of Japan's international trade, that...
This paper discusses the per-capita consumption of imports aspect of international trade. A re...
This study highlights the role of departure months of shipping and the discrepancies in mirror trade...
This paper provides a sectoral examination of the impact of trade policies and custom valuation proc...
This paper uses the methodology developed in Kehoe and Ruhl (2013) to measure the change in the exte...
This paper provides new evidence on export price elasticities by analyzing the cases of China, Franc...
Using novel firm-level microdata and leveraging a natural experiment, this pa-per provides causal ev...
The first essay addresses the structure of sunk export entry costs. Heterogeneous firm models of int...