Venting Out: Exports during a Domestic Slump
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Defense date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
We study the relationship between domestic-demand shocks and exports, using data for Spanish manufacturing firms in 2002-13. Exploiting plausibly exogenous geographical variation caused by the Great Recession, we find that firms whose domestic sales declined more experienced a larger increase in export flows, controlling for firms’ supply determinants. This result illustrates the capacity of export markets to counteract the negative impact of local demand shocks. By structurally estimating a heterogeneous-firm model of exporting with non-constant marginal costs of production, we conclude that these firm-level responses accounted for half of the spectacular increase in Spanish goods exports over the period 2009-13.
