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Andrew B. Bernard

Researcher at Dartmouth College

Publications -  201
Citations -  36019

Andrew B. Bernard is an academic researcher from Dartmouth College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Productivity & Free trade. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 200 publications receiving 34404 citations. Previous affiliations of Andrew B. Bernard include Economic Policy Institute & Stanford University.

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Exceptional Exporter Performance: Cause, Effect, or Both?

TL;DR: The evidence is quite" clear on one point: good firms become exporters, both growth rates and levels of success measures" are higher ex-ante for exporters as mentioned in this paper.
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Exceptional exporter performance : cause, effect, or both?

TL;DR: A growing body of empirical work has documented the superior performance characteristics of exporting plants and firms relative to non-exporters as discussed by the authors, showing that good firms become exporters, both growth rates and levels of success measures are higher ex-ante for exporters.
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Plants and Productivity in International Trade

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reconcile trade theory with plant-level export behavior, extending the Ricardian model to accommodate many countries, geographic barriers, and imperfect competition, and examine the impact of globalization and dollar appreciation on productivity, plant entry and exit, and labor turnover.
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Firms in International Trade

TL;DR: The authors make use of transaction-level U.S. trade data to introduce a number of new stylized facts about firms and trade, such as the extensive margins of trade, that is, the number of products firms trade and the countries with which they trade, to understand the role of distance in dampening aggregate trade flows.
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Firms in international trade

TL;DR: This paper found that exporters are larger, more productive, more skill-and capital-intensive, and to pay higher wages than non-exporting firms, and that the top 10 percent of exporters accounted for 96 percent of total U.S. exports.