The creation and destruction margins of employment (job flows) can be used to measure the employment effects of disruptions to firm credit. Using a firm dynamics model, we establish that a tightening of credit to firms reduces employment primarily by reducing gross job creation, exhibiting stronger effects at new, young, and middle-sized firms. The firm credit channel accounts for, at most, 18%, of the decline in US employment in the Great Recession. Using MSA-level job flows data, we show that the job flows response to identified credit shocks is consistent with our model's predictions
The Great Recession was the most severe recession experienced by the U.S. since the Great Depression...
This paper takes advantage of access to detailed matched bank-firm data to investigate whether and h...
In a seminal paper, Davis and Haltiwanger (1990) demonstrate that recessions are associated with an ...
The creation and destruction margins of employment (job flows) can be used to measure the employment...
The global financial recession of 2008-9 as well as historical precedents with financial crises sug...
The global financial recession of 2008-9 as well as historical precedents with financial crises sug...
The Great Recession has drawn attention to the importance of macro-financial linkages. In this paper...
Economists debate how important credit availability is to sustaining real economic growth. Episodes ...
We analyze the heterogeneous employment effects of financial shocks using a rich data set of job con...
This paper investigates the effect of financial shocks using a general equilibrium model that links ...
This paper investigates the effect of financial shocks using a general equilibrium model that links ...
The Great Recession has renewed interest in the real effects of credit supply shocks. In this paper ...
The U.S. Great Recession featured a large decline in output and labor, tighter financial conditions...
We estimate the effect of the sharp reduction in credit supply following the 2008 financial crisis o...
We estimate the effect of the reduction in credit supply that followed the 2008 financial crisis on ...
The Great Recession was the most severe recession experienced by the U.S. since the Great Depression...
This paper takes advantage of access to detailed matched bank-firm data to investigate whether and h...
In a seminal paper, Davis and Haltiwanger (1990) demonstrate that recessions are associated with an ...
The creation and destruction margins of employment (job flows) can be used to measure the employment...
The global financial recession of 2008-9 as well as historical precedents with financial crises sug...
The global financial recession of 2008-9 as well as historical precedents with financial crises sug...
The Great Recession has drawn attention to the importance of macro-financial linkages. In this paper...
Economists debate how important credit availability is to sustaining real economic growth. Episodes ...
We analyze the heterogeneous employment effects of financial shocks using a rich data set of job con...
This paper investigates the effect of financial shocks using a general equilibrium model that links ...
This paper investigates the effect of financial shocks using a general equilibrium model that links ...
The Great Recession has renewed interest in the real effects of credit supply shocks. In this paper ...
The U.S. Great Recession featured a large decline in output and labor, tighter financial conditions...
We estimate the effect of the sharp reduction in credit supply following the 2008 financial crisis o...
We estimate the effect of the reduction in credit supply that followed the 2008 financial crisis on ...
The Great Recession was the most severe recession experienced by the U.S. since the Great Depression...
This paper takes advantage of access to detailed matched bank-firm data to investigate whether and h...
In a seminal paper, Davis and Haltiwanger (1990) demonstrate that recessions are associated with an ...