• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Arm's-Length Trade : A Source of Post-Crisis Trade Weakness
  • Contributor: Lakatos, Csilla [Author]; Ohnsorge, Franziska [Other]; Lakatos, Csilla [Other]
  • imprint: Washington, D.C: The World Bank, 2017
  • Published in: World Bank E-Library Archive
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (22 p)
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1596/1813-9450-8144
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  • Description: Trade growth has slowed sharply since the global financial crisis. U.S. trade data highlights that arm's-length trade-trade between unaffiliated firms-accounts disproportionately for the overall post-crisis trade slowdown. This is partly because arm's-length trade depends more heavily than intra-firm trade on emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs), where output growth has slowed sharply from elevated pre-crisis rates, and on sectors with rapid pre-crisis growth that boosted arm's-length trade pre-crisis but that have languished post-crisis. Compounding such compositional effects, arm's-length trade is also more sensitive to changes in demand and real exchange rates. For example, the income elasticity of arm's-length exports is about one-fifth higher than that of intra-firm exports. Hence, post-crisis global growth weakness has weighed more on arm's-length trade than on intra-firm trade. Unaffiliated firms may also have been hindered more than multinational firms by constrained access to finance during the crisis, heightened policy uncertainty, and their typical firm-level characteristics