Exports and bank shocks: Evidence from matched firm-bank data

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Abstract

A growing literature aims to understand the structural change and cyclical factors that contributed to the Great Trade Collapse. This paper adds to the conversation by investigating the impact of bank distress on firms’ exports using matched firm-bank data for the UK. We use two novel measures of bank distress: the Basel III net stable funding ratio, as well as the market-based bank credit default swap spreads, which best capture bank default risk, especially during crises. Our detailed database provides the crucial firm-bank relationship information that allows us to directly test for the banking channel effect on the real economy, and to carefully account for various endogeneities and biases in estimation. We also test for the possible contagion of the Sovereign Debt Crisis from the GIIPS economies to the UK. We find that the severe bank distress generated by the recent crises immediately, negatively and significantly affects UK firms’ exports, independent of demand shocks. Not all firms were impacted equally: private firms and firms in industries more dependent on external finance were impacted the most, while publicly owned firms were less affected by their bank's distress.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)46-56
Number of pages11
JournalStructural Change and Economic Dynamics
Volume47
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2018

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Economics and Econometrics

Keywords

  • Bank distress
  • Crisis
  • Exports
  • UK

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