33 Liberty Street
New York, NY 10045
United States
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
SSRN RANKINGS
in Total Papers Downloads
in Total Papers Citations
exchange rate pass-through, pricing-to-market, import intensity
exchange rate pass-through, import intensity, pricing-to-market
international banking, global financial crisis, supply shocks versus demand shocks, BIS consolidated banking statistics
international banking, global financial crisis, supply vs demand shocks, BIS consolidated banking statistics
This is a CEPR Discussion Paper. CEPR charges a fee of $8.00 for this paper.
If you wish to purchase the right to make copies of this paper for distribution to others, please select the quantity.
International banking, global financial crisis, supply vs demand shocks, BIS consolidated banking statistics
International Banking, Global Financial Crisis, Supply vs Demand Shocks, BIS Consolidated Banking Statistics
credit constraints, investment
credit constraints, financial markets, granular shock
market concentration, markups, import competition, international trade
China, trade liberalization, input tariffs, exports, variety
productivity, convergence, emerging markets
International trade, tariffs, Trade War
exports, financial crisis, financial shocks, Japan, trade finance
Competition, Growth, Proximity to Frontier, Quality Upgrading
firm heterogeneity, input tariffs, output tariffs, trade liberalization, wages
import prices, china
strategic complementarities, pass-through, exchange rates, prices, mark-up
adjustment costs, Event studies, protection
Developing countries, market access, preference erosion, tariffs, WTO
currency choice, exchange rate pass-through
This is a National Bureau of Economic Research Paper. NBER charges a fee of $5.00 for this paper.
File name: nber.pdf Size: 0K
Passthrough, tariffs, Trade War
import tariffs, intermediate inputs, wage inequality
trade war, import tariffs, stock returns
trade war, tariffs, stock returns
concentration, markups, import competition
global supply chains, imports, inflation, China
large firms, productivity, spillovers