The global financial crisis: trying to understand the global trade downturn and recovery
Robert Anderton and
Tadios Tewolde
No 1370, Working Paper Series from European Central Bank
Abstract:
This paper aims to shed light on why the downturn in global trade during the intensification of the financial crisis in 2008Q4-2009Q1 was so severe and synchronized across the world, and also examines the subsequent recovery in global trade during 2009Q2-2010Q1. The paper finds that a structural imports function which captures the different and time-varying importintensities of the components of total final expenditure can explain the sharp decline in global imports of goods and services. By contrast, a specification based on aggregate total expenditure can not fully capture the global trade downturn. In particular, panel estimates for a large number of OECD countries suggest that the high import-intensity of exports at the country-level can explain a significant proportion of the decline in world imports during the crisis, while declines in the highly import-intensive expenditure category of investment also contributed to the remaining fall in global trade. At the same time, the high and rising import-intensity of exports also reflects and captures the rapid growth in “vertical specialisation”, suggesting that widespread global production chains may have amplified the downturn in world trade and partly explains its high-degree of synchronisation across the globe. In addition, the estimates find that stockbuilding, business confidence and credit conditions also played a role in the global trade downturn. Meanwhile, the global trade recovery (2009Q2-2010Q1) can only be partially explained by differential elasticities for the components of demand (although the results confirm that the upturn in OECD imports was also driven by strong export growth and the associated reactivation of global production chains, as well as the recovery in stockbuilding and the fiscal stimulus). This may be due in part to the many policy measures that were implemented to boost global trade at that time and which can not be captured by the specification. JEL Classification: E0, F01, F10, F15, F17
Keywords: financial crisis; forecasting; globalisation; global trade downturn and recovery; import-intensity of components of total final expenditure; synchronisation; timevarying parameters; vertical specialisation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011-08
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cba
Note: 339014
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (20)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ecb:ecbwps:20111370
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