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Keywords:Exports - China 

Journal Article
Chinese growth: a source of U.S. export opportunities

This article was originally presented as a speech to the Fiscal Affairs and Government Operations Committee, Council of State Governments' Southern Legislative Conference (SLC), Louisville, Kentucky, July 31, 2006.
Review , Volume 88 , Issue Nov , Pages 471-484

Working Paper
China and emerging Asia: comrades or competitors?

We explore whether increases in China?s exports reduce exports of other emerging Asian economies. We find that correlations between Chinese export growth and that of other emerging Asian economies are actually positive (though often not significantly so), even after controlling for the effects of income growth of trading partners and real effective exchange rates. We also present results from a VAR estimation of aggregate trade equations on the relative importance of foreign income and exchange rates in the determination of Asian export growth. An important finding is that, while exchange ...
Working Paper Series , Paper WP-03-27

Working Paper
China and emerging Asia: comrades or competitors?

Do increases in China's exports reduce exports of other emerging Asian economies? We find that correlations between Chinese export growth and that of other emerging Asian economies are actually positive (though usually not significant), even after controlling for trading-partner income growth and real effective exchange rates. We also present results from a VAR estimation of aggregate trade equations on the relative importance of foreign income and exchange rates in determining Asian export growth. Although exchange rates do matter for export performance, the income growth of trading partners ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 789

Working Paper
Is China \"exporting deflation\"?

In the past few years, observers increasingly have pointed to China as a source of downward pressure on global prices. This paper evaluates the theoretical and empirical evidence bearing on the question of whether China's buoyant export growth has led to significant changes in the inflation performance of its trading partners. This evidence suggests that the impact of Chinese exports on global prices has been, while non-negligible, fairly modest. On a priori grounds, our theoretical analysis suggests that China's economy is still too small relative to the world economy to have much effect on ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 791

Report
Chinese exports and U.S. import prices

This paper develops a technique to decompose price distributions into contributions from markups and marginal cost. The estimators are then used as a laboratory to measure the relationship between increasing Chinese competition and the components of U.S. import prices. The estimates suggest that the intensification of Chinese exports in the 2000s corresponded to substantial changes in the distributions of both the markups and marginal cost of U.S. imports. The entry of a Chinese exporter in an industry corresponded to rest-of-world exporters shrinking their markup (lowering prices by up to 30 ...
Staff Reports , Paper 591

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