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Firm-to-Firm Trade: Exports, Imports, and the Labor Market

Author

Listed:
  • Jonathan Eaton

    (Pennsylvania State University)

  • Francis Kramarz

    (CREST, ENSAE)

  • Samuel Kortum

    (Yale University)

Abstract

Firm-level customs and production data reveal both the heterogeneity and the granularity of individual buyers and sellers. We seek to capture these firm-level features in a general equilibrium model that is also consistent with observations at the aggregate level. Our model is one of product trade through random meetings. Buyers, who may be households looking for final products or firms looking for inputs, connect with sellers randomly. At the firm level, the model generates predictions for buyer-seller connections and the share of labor in production broadly consistent with observations on French manufacturers and their customers in other countries of the European Union. At the aggregate level, firm-to-firm trade determines bilateral trade shares as well as labor's share of output in each country.

Suggested Citation

  • Jonathan Eaton & Francis Kramarz & Samuel Kortum, 2019. "Firm-to-Firm Trade: Exports, Imports, and the Labor Market," 2019 Meeting Papers 702, Society for Economic Dynamics.
  • Handle: RePEc:red:sed019:702
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Krolikowski, Pawel M. & McCallum, Andrew H., 2021. "Goods-market frictions and international trade," Journal of International Economics, Elsevier, vol. 129(C).
    2. Cristina Herghelegiu & Evgenii Monastyrenko, 2020. "Risk and Cost Sharing in Firm-to-Firm Trade," DEM Discussion Paper Series 20-24, Department of Economics at the University of Luxembourg.
    3. Jules Depersin & B'ereng`ere Patault, 2023. "Revisiting the effect of search frictions on market concentration," Papers 2303.01824, arXiv.org.

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