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Title: Firm Size, Quality Bias and Import Demand

Author(s): Joaquin Blaum, Claire Lelarge and Michael Peters

Publication Date: April 2019

Keyword(s): Firm Heterogeneity, firm size, non-homothetic import demand, quality-productivity complementarity and trade in intermediate inputs

Programme Area(s): International Trade and Regional Economics

Abstract: Commonly used firm-based models of importing imply that firm productivity should have no effect on the allocation of expenditure across a common set of sourcing countries. Using French data, we show that this homotheticity property is soundly rejected: larger firms concentrate their import spending on their top varieties, holding the sourcing strategy fixed. To rationalize this finding, we propose a novel model of importing that features (i) a complementarity between firm productivity and input quality and (ii) heterogeneity across countries in their ability to produce high quality inputs. This model implies that large firms bias their spending towards countries with a comparative advantage in producing high quality inputs and hence generates a non-homothetic import demand system. We provide empirical support for this and other predictions of this theory.

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Bibliographic Reference

Blaum, J, Lelarge, C and Peters, M. 2019. 'Firm Size, Quality Bias and Import Demand'. London, Centre for Economic Policy Research. https://cepr.org/active/publications/discussion_papers/dp.php?dpno=13700