European Research Workshop in International Trade (ERWIT) - Papers

European Research Workshop in International Trade

ana

(ERWIT)

Hosted and Sponsored by

London School of Economics, Centre for Economic Policy Research

London 5-7 June 2019

 

Identity Politics and Trade Policy by Gene Grossman, Princeton University and CEPR (with Elhanan Helpman) 

Shift-Share Designs: Theory and Inference by Eduardo Morales, Princeton University and CEPR (with Rodrigo Adão Michal Kolesár)

Global Giants and Local Stars: Multinational Brand Amalgamation by Keith Head, University of British Columbia, CEP and CEPR (with Vanessa Alviarez and Thierry Mayer)

Escaping Import Competition in China by Ana Ceclia Fieler, Yale University (with Ann Harrison)

IO for Export(s) by Peter Neary, University of Oxford and CEPR (with Monika Mrazova)

The Political Economy Consequences of China's Export Slowdown by Davin Chor, Dartmouth and NUS (with Filipe R. Campante and Bingjing Li) 

The Making of the Modern Metropolis: Evidence from London by Stephen Redding, Princeton University and CEPR (with Stephan Heblich and Daniel M. Sturm) 

The Impact of E-Commerce on Urban Prices and Welfare by David E. Weinstein, Columbia University (with Yoon J. Jo and Misaki Matsumura) 

Comparative Advantage, Competition, and Firm Heterogeneity by Gianmarco Ottaviano, Bocconi University, CEP and CEPR (with Hanwei Huang) 

Trade Policy is Real News: A quantitative analysis of past, current, and future changes in U.S. trade barriers by George Alessandria, University of Rochester (with Carter Mix) 

Dominant Currencies How Firms choose currency invoicing and why it matters by Mary Amiti, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and CEPR (Oleg Itskhoki and Jozef Konings) 

Globalization, Gender, and the Family by Hale Utar, Bielefeld University and CESifo (with Wolfgang Keller) 

The Origins of Firm Heterogeneity: A Production Network Approach by Glenn Magerman, ECARES, Université libre de Bruxelles (with Andreas Moxnes, Andrew B. Bernard, Emmanuel Dhyne, Kalina Manova)

Techies, Trade, and Skill-Biased Productivity by James Harrigan, University of Virginia (with Ariell Reshef and Farid Toubal)

Structural Transformation, Industrial Specialization,and Endogenous Growth by Joan Monras, UPF, BGSE, and CEPR (with Paula Bustos, Juan Manuel Castro Vincenzi, Jacopo Ponticelli)

Technology Gaps, Trade and Income by Thomas Sampson, London School of Economics, CEP and CEPR