Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T02:30:22.576Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

THE GREAT TRADE COLLAPSE: AN EVALUATION OF COMPETING STORIES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 September 2019

Hakan Yilmazkuday*
Affiliation:
Florida International University
*
Address correspondence to: Hakan Yilmazkuday, Department of Economics, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA. e-mail: [email protected]. Phone: 305-348-2316. Fax: 305-348-1524

Abstract

The reduction in international trade has been more than the reduction in economic activity during the 2008 financial crisis, against the one-to-one relationship between them implied by standard trade models. This so-called the Great Trade Collapse (GTC) has been investigated extensively in the literature resulting in alternative competing stories as potential explanations. By introducing and estimating a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model using 18 quarterly series from the USA, including those that represent the competing stories, this paper evaluates the contribution of each story to GTC. The results show that retail inventories have contributed the most to the collapse and the corresponding recovery, followed by protectionist policies, intermediate-input trade, and trade finance. Productivity and demand shocks have played negligible roles.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

The author would like thank the editor William A. Barnett, an associate editor, two anonymous referees, and the participants of Midwest International Trade Meetings at Indiana University Bloomington, Society for Nonlinear Dynamics and Econometrics Meetings at Dallas Fed, Midwest Macroeconomics Meetings at University of Colorado-Boulder, and at University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign for their helpful comments and suggestions. The usual disclaimer applies.

References

REFERENCES

Ahn, J., Amiti, M. and Weinstein, D. E. (2011) Trade finance and the great trade collapse. American Economic Review 101(3), 298302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alessandria, G., Kaboski, J. P. and Midrigan, V. (2010a) The great trade collapse of 2008–09: An inventory adjustment? IMF Economic Review 58(2), 254294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alessandria, G., Kaboski, J. P. and Midrigan, V. (2010b) Inventories, lumpy trade, and large devaluations. American Economic Review 100(5), 23042339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alessandria, G., Kaboski, J. P. and Midrigan, V. (2011) US trade and inventory dynamics. American Economic Review 101(3), 303–07.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alessandria, G., Kaboski, J. and Midrigan, V. (2013) Trade wedges, inventories, and international business cycles. Journal of Monetary Economics 60(1), 120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amiti, M. and Weinstein, D. E. (2011) Exports and financial shocks. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 126(4), 18411877.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baldwin, R. and Evenett, S. J. (2008) The crisis and protectionism: Steps world leaders should take. VOXeu.org.Google Scholar
Behrens, K., Corcos, G. and Mion, G. (2013) Trade crisis? What trade crisis? Review of Economics and Statistics 95(2), 702709.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bems, R., Johnson, R. C. and Yi, K.-M. (2010) Demand spillovers and the collapse of trade in the global recession. IMF Economic Review 58(2), 295326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bems, R., Johnson, R. C. and Yi, K.-M. (2013) The great trade collapse. Annual Review of Economics 5(1), 375400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergin, P. R. (2006) How well can the new open economy macroeconomics explain the exchange rate and current account? Journal of International Money and Finance 25, 675701.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bils, M. and Kahn, J. A. (2000) What inventory behavior tells us about business cycles. American Economic Review 90(3), 458481.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bown, C. P. and Crowley, M. A. (2013) Import protection, business cycles, and exchange rates: Evidence from the great recession. Journal of International Economics 1(90), 5064.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bussière, M., Callegari, G., Ghironi, F., Sestieri, G. and Yamano, N. (2013) Estimating trade elasticities: Demand composition and the trade collapse of 2008–2009. American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 5(3), 118151.Google Scholar
Carlstrom, C. T. and Zaman, S. (2014) Using an improved Taylor rule to predict when policy changes will occur. Economic Commentary, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, March.Google Scholar
Chor, D. and Manova, K. (2012) Off the cliff and back? Credit conditions and international trade during the global financial crisis. Journal of International Economics 87(1), 117133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corsetti, G., Dedola, L. and Leduc, S. (2008) High exchange-rate volatility and low pass-through. Journal of Monetary Economics 55(6), 11131128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corsetti, G. and Pesenti, P. (2001) Welfare and macroeconomic interdependence. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 116(2), 421445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowley, M. A. and Luo, X. (2011) Understanding the great trade collapse of 2008–09 and the subsequent trade recovery. Economic Perspectives 35(2), 4468.Google Scholar
Eaton, J., Kortum, S., Neiman, B. and Romalis, J. (2016) Trade and the global recession. American Economic Review 106(11), 3401–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feenstra, R. C., Li, Z. and Yu, M. (2014) Exports and credit constraints under incomplete information: Theory and evidence from China. Review of Economics and Statistics 96(4), 729744.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heathcote, J. and Perri, F. (2002) Financial autarky and international business cycles. Journal of Monetary Economics 49(3), 601627.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levchenko, A. A., Lewis, L. T. and Tesar, L. L. (2010) The collapse of international trade during the 2008–09 crisis: In search of the smoking gun. IMF Economic Review 58(2), 214253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Novy, D. and Taylor, A. M. (2014) Trade and Uncertainty. National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Papers: No. 19941.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paravisini, D., Rappoport, V., Schnabl, P. and Wolfenzon, D. (2014) Dissecting the effect of credit supply on trade: Evidence from matched credit-export data. The Review of Economic Studies 82(1), 333359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rudebusch, G. D. (2009) The Fed’s monetary policy response to the current crisis. FRBSF Economic Letter.Google Scholar
Smets, F. and Wouters, R. (2003) An estimated dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model of the euro area. Journal of the European Economic Association 1(5), 11231175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stockman, A. C. and Tesar, L. L. (1995) Tastes and technology in a two-country model of the business cycle: Explaining international comovements. The American Economic Review 85(1), 168185.Google Scholar
Zymek, R. (2012) Sovereign default, international lending, and trade. IMF Economic Review 60(3), 365394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar