Publication | Open Access
Globalization, Trade Imbalances, and Labor Market Adjustment
55
Citations
51
References
2023
Year
Trade CostsInternational EconomicsTradeEconomic IntegrationLabor Market AdjustmentEconomic FluctuationTime Series EconometricsOpen Economy MacroeconomicsEconomic AnalysisGlobalization ShocksStatisticsEconomicsBalanced TradeTrade PatternGlobalizationTrade ImbalancesTrade PolicyMacroeconomicsTrade EconomicsShock (Economics)BusinessEconometricsLabor Market ImpactUnemployment
Abstract We argue that modeling trade imbalances is crucial for understanding transitional dynamics in response to globalization shocks. We build and estimate a general equilibrium, multicountry, multisector model of trade with two key ingredients: (i) endogenous trade imbalances arising from households’ consumption and saving decisions; (ii) labor market frictions across and within sectors. We use our model to perform several empirical exercises. We find that the “China shock” accounted for 28% of the decline in U.S. manufacturing between 2000 and 2014—1.65 times the magnitude predicted from a model imposing balanced trade. A concurrent rise in U.S. service employment led to a negligible aggregate unemployment response. We benchmark our model’s predictions for the gains from trade against the popular ACR sufficient-statistics approach. We find that our predictions for the long-run gains from trade and consumption dynamics significantly diverge.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1