The US-China Trade War and Global Reallocations

The US-China trade war created net export opportunities rather than simply shifting trade across destinations. Many “bystander” countries grew their exports of taxed products into the rest of the world (excluding the United States and China). Country-specific components of tariff elasticities, rather than specialization patterns, drove large cross-country variation in export growth of tariff-exposed products. The elasticities of exports to US-Chinese tariffs identify whether a country’s exports complement or substitute the United States or China and its supply curve’s slope. Countries that operate along downward-sloping supplies whose exports substitute (complement) the United States and China are among the larger (smaller) beneficiaries of the trade war. (JEL F13, F14, O19, P33)

[1]  Eduardo Morales,et al.  Firm Export Dynamics in Interdependent Markets , 2023, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[2]  Pablo D. Fajgelbaum,et al.  The Economic Impacts of the US-China Trade War , 2021, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[3]  S. Robinson,et al.  Traders' dilemma: Developing countries' response to trade wars , 2020 .

[4]  A. Mattoo,et al.  Handbook of Deep Trade Agreements , 2020 .

[5]  Ali Hortaçsu,et al.  The Production Relocation and Price Effects of US Trade Policy: The Case of Washing Machines , 2020 .

[6]  Ricardo Reyes-Heroles,et al.  Emerging Markets and the New Geography of Trade: The Effects of Rising Trade Barriers , 2020, IMF Economic Review.

[7]  Pablo D. Fajgelbaum,et al.  The Return to Protectionism* , 2020 .

[8]  R. Monarch,et al.  Rising Import Tariffs, Falling Export Growth: When Modern Supply Chains Meet Old-Style Protectionism , 2020, International Finance Discussion Paper.

[9]  Felipe Benguria,et al.  Dissecting the Impact of the 2018-2019 Trade War on U.S. Exports , 2019, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[10]  Justin R. Pierce,et al.  Disentangling the Effects of the 2018-2019 Tariffs on a Globally Connected U.S. Manufacturing Sector , 2019, Finance and Economics Discussion Series.

[11]  David E. Weinstein,et al.  The Impact of the 2018 Tariffs on Prices and Welfare , 2019, Journal of Economic Perspectives.

[12]  M. Waugh,et al.  The Consumption Response to Trade Shocks: Evidence from the Us-China Trade War , 2019, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[13]  A. Cavallo,et al.  Tariff Passthrough at the Border and at the Store: Evidence from Us Trade Policy , 2019, American Economic Review: Insights.

[14]  A. Rodrı́guez-Clare,et al.  The Textbook Case for Industrial Policy: Theory Meets Data , 2019 .

[15]  Ariel T. Burstein,et al.  Changes in Between-Group Inequality: Computers, Occupations, and International Trade , 2019, American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics.

[16]  Gloria Sheu,et al.  Extended Gravity , 2019, The Review of Economic Studies.

[17]  M. Almunia,et al.  Venting Out: Exports During a Domestic Slump , 2018, American Economic Review.

[18]  Michel Christian UNCTAD , 2018, Den Kalten Krieg vermessen.

[19]  N. Ramondo,et al.  Trade with Correlation , 2018, American Economic Review.

[20]  Susan Athey,et al.  When Should You Adjust Standard Errors for Clustering? , 2017, The Quarterly Journal of Economics.

[21]  N. Limão,et al.  Policy Uncertainty, Trade, and Welfare: Theory and Evidence for China and the United States , 2017, World Scientific Studies in International Economics.

[22]  A. Rodrı́guez-Clare,et al.  Slicing the Pie: Quantifying the Aggregate and Distributional Effects of Trade , 2017, The Review of Economic Studies.

[23]  Alexander F. McQuoid,et al.  Capacity Constrained Exporters: Identifying Increasing Marginal Cost , 2017 .

[24]  D. Donaldson,et al.  Nonparametric Counterfactual Predictions in Neoclassical Models of International Trade , 2017 .

[25]  A. Rodrı́guez-Clare,et al.  Grounded by Gravity: A Well-Behaved Trade Model with Industry-Level Economies of Scale , 2016, American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics.

[26]  Volodymyr Lugovskyy,et al.  Profits, Scale Economies, and the Gains from Trade and Industrial Policy , 2016, American Economic Review.

[27]  Heidi L. Williams,et al.  The More We Die, the More We Sell? A Simple Test of the Home-Market Effect , 2016, The quarterly journal of economics.

[28]  Karsten Mau US Policy Spillover (?) -- China's Accession to the WTO and Rising Exports to the EU , 2015 .

[29]  Pablo D. Fajgelbaum,et al.  Measuring the Unequal Gains from Trade , 2014 .

[30]  Peter K. Schott,et al.  The Surprisingly Swift Decline of U.S. Manufacturing Employment , 2012, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[31]  D. Novy International Trade Without CES: Estimating Translog Gravity , 2012 .

[32]  Thomas Chaney,et al.  Market Size, Division of Labor, and Firm Productivity , 2012 .

[33]  T. Mayer,et al.  Notes on CEPII’s Distances Measures: The GeoDist Database , 2011 .

[34]  E. Rossi-Hansberg,et al.  The Impact of Trade on Organization and Productivity , 2011 .

[35]  D. Donaldson,et al.  What Goods Do Countries Trade? A Quantitative Exploration of Ricardo&Apos;S Ideas , 2010 .

[36]  David E. Weinstein,et al.  Globalization, Markups, and US Welfare , 2010, Journal of Political Economy.

[37]  A. Khandelwal,et al.  The Role of Intermediaries in Facilitating Trade , 2010 .

[38]  E. Rossi-Hansberg,et al.  External Economies and International Trade Redux , 2008 .

[39]  Alessandro Nicita,et al.  Import Demand Elasticities and Trade Distortions , 2004, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[40]  Jonathan Eaton,et al.  Technology, Geography, and Trade , 2002 .

[41]  James E. Anderson,et al.  Gravity with Gravitas: A Solution to the Border Puzzle , 2001 .

[42]  J. Angrist,et al.  Identification and Estimation of Local Average Treatment Effects , 1994 .

[43]  T. Sampson,et al.  Import Liberalization as Export Destruction? Evidence from the United States , 2022, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[44]  Anson Soderbery,et al.  Trade Elasticities in General Equilibrium , 2020 .

[45]  Margo J. Anderson Census , 2011, International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science.

[46]  F. Parro Estimates of the Trade and Welfare Effects of NAFTA , 2009 .

[47]  Paul Krugman American Economic Association Scale Economies , Product Differentiation , and the Pattern of Trade , 2022 .