Off the Cliff and Back? Credit Conditions and International Trade During the Global Financial Crisis
- 15 December 2009
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
We study the collapse of international trade flows during the global financial crisis using detailed data on monthly US imports. We show that credit conditions were an important channel through which the crisis affected trade volumes, by exploiting the variation in the cost of capital across countries and over time, as well as the variation in financial vulnerability across sectors. Countries with higher interbank rates and thus tighter credit markets exported less to the US during the peak of the crisis. This effect was especially pronounced in sectors that require extensive external financing, have limited access to trade credit, or have few collateralizable assets. Exports of financially vulnerable industries were thus more sensitive to the cost of external capital than exports of less vulnerable industries, and this sensitivity rose during the financial crisis. The quantitative implications of our estimates for trade volumes highlight the large real effects of financial crises and the potential gains from policy intervention.Keywords
This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Trade Crisis? What Trade Crisis?The Review of Economics and Statistics, 2013
- The Vulnerability of Sub-Saharan Africa to Financial Crises: The Case of TradeIMF Economic Review, 2012
- The Great Trade Collapse of 2008–09: An Inventory Adjustment?IMF Economic Review, 2010
- Firms and the Global Crisis: French Exports in the TurmoilSSRN Electronic Journal, 2009
- Exports and Financial ShocksPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2009
- Multinational Firms, FDI Flows, and Imperfect Capital Markets*The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2009
- Finance and the Business Cycle: International, Inter‐Industry EvidenceThe Journal of Finance, 2005
- Financial Dependence and International TradeReview of International Economics, 2003
- Financial development and international tradeJournal of International Economics, 2002
- The NBER Manufacturing Productivity DatabasePublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1996