Discussion paper

DP17926 Import Competition, Trade Credit, and Financial Frictions in General Equilibrium

We analyze the role of trade credit and financial frictions in the propagation of international trade shocks along the supply chain. First, we show empirically that exposure to import competition from China increased the use of trade credit in the U.S. Then, we use a multi-country input-output trade model with borrowing constraints, trade credit, and endogenous employment to quantify the general equilibrium effects of such increase, characterizing the different channels at work. Borrowing constraints amplify the negative consequences of the China shock on employment, but introducing trade credit reduces these losses by 8%-27%, depending on the tightness of the constraints.

£6.00
Citation

Esposito, F and F Hassan (2023), ‘DP17926 Import Competition, Trade Credit, and Financial Frictions in General Equilibrium‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 17926. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp17926