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Credit Constraints, Heterogeneous Firms and International Trade

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TLDR
This article examined the detrimental consequences of financial market imperfections for international trade and developed a heterogeneous-firm model with countries at different levels of financial development and sectors of varying financial vulnerability.
Abstract
This paper examines the detrimental consequences of financial market imperfections for international trade. I develop a heterogeneous-firm model with countries at different levels of financial development and sectors of varying financial vulnerability. Applying this model to aggregate trade data, I study the mechanisms through which credit constraints operate. First, financial development increases countries' exports above and beyond its impact on overall production. Firm selection into exporting accounts for a third of the trade-specific effect, while two thirds are due to reductions in firm-level exports. Second, financially advanced economies export a wider range of products and their exports experience less product turnover. Finally, while all countries service large destinations, exporters with superior financial institutions have more trading partners and also enter smaller markets. All of these effects are magnified in financially vulnerable sectors. These results have important policy implications for less developed economies that rely on exports for economic growth but suffer from poor financial contractibility.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Credit constraints and exports: : a survey of empirical studies using firm-level data

TL;DR: This article presented a tabular survey of 32 empirical studies that cover 14 different countries plus five multi-country studies, concluding that financial constraints are important for the export decisions of firms: exporting firms are less financially constrained than non-exporting firms.
Book ChapterDOI

Numerical Methods for Large-Scale Dynamic Economic Models

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Testing the Trade Credit and Trade Link: Evidence from Data on Export Credit Insurance

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of trade credit on trade on a macro level through a whole cycle was analyzed using Berne Union data on export credit insurance, the most extensive dataset on trade credits available at the moment, for the period of 2005-2011.
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