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Featured researches published by Kalina Manova.


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2005

Volatility and Growth: Credit Constraints and Productivity-Enhancing Investment

Philippe Aghion; George-Marios Angeletos; Abhijit V. Banerjee; Kalina Manova

We examine how credit constraints affect the cyclical behavior of productivity-enhancing investment and thereby volatility and growth. We first develop a simple growth model where firms engage in two types of investment: a short-term one and a long-term productivity-enhancing one. Because it takes longer to complete, long-term investment has a relatively less procyclical return but also a higher liquidity risk. Under complete financial markets, long-term investment is countercyclical, thus mitigating volatility. But when firms face tight credit constraints, long-term investment turns procyclical, thus amplifying volatility. Tighter credit therefore leads to both higher aggregate volatility and lower mean growth for a given total investment rate. We next confront the model with a panel of countries over the period 1960-2000 and find that a lower degree of financial development predicts a higher sensitivity of both the composition of investment and mean growth to exogenous shocks, as well as a stronger negative effect of volatility on growth.


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2009

China's exporters and importers: firms, products, and trade partners

Kalina Manova; Zhiwei Zhang

This paper uses newly available data on Chinese trade flows to establish novel and confirm existing stylized facts about firm heterogeneity in trade. First, the bulk of exports and imports are captured by a few multi�?product firms that transact with a large number of countries. Second, the average importer imports more products than the average exporter exports, but exporters trade with more countries than importers do. Third, compared to private domestic firms, foreign affiliates and joint ventures trade more and import more products from more source countries, but export fewer products to fewer destinations. Fourth, the relationship between firms’ intensive and extensive margin of trade is non-monotonic, differs between exporters and importers, and depends on the ownership structure of the firm. Fifth, firms frequently exit and re-enter into trade and regularly change their product mix and trade partners, but foreign firms exhibit less churning. Finally, most of the growth in Chinese exports between 2003-2005 was driven by deepening and broadening of trade relationships by surviving firms, while reallocations across firms contributed only 30%. These stylized facts shed light on the cost structure of international trade and the importance of foreign ownership for firms’ export and import decisions.


Journal of International Economics | 2012

Off the Cliff and Back? Credit Conditions and International Trade During the Global Financial Crisis

Davin Chor; Kalina Manova


Journal of International Economics | 2008

Credit Constraints, Equity Market Liberalizations and International Trade

Kalina Manova


Journal of Monetary Economics | 2010

Volatility and growth: Credit constraints and the composition of investment

Philippe Aghion; George-Marios Angeletos; Abhijit V. Banerjee; Kalina Manova


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2008

Credit Constraints, Heterogeneous Firms, and International Trade

Kalina Manova


Review of economics | 2015

International Trade, Multinational Activity, and Corporate Finance

C. Fritz Foley; Kalina Manova


CESifo Forum | 2014

Firms and Credit Constraints along the Global Value Chain: Processing Trade in China

Kalina Manova


Journal of International Economics | 2017

Multi-Product Firms and Product Quality

Kalina Manova; Zhihong Yu


Journal of Development Economics | 2015

Financial Development and the Choice of Trade Partners

Jackie M.L. Chan; Kalina Manova

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Davin Chor

Singapore Management University

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Zhihong Yu

University of Nottingham

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Zhiwei Zhang

International Monetary Fund

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Abhijit V. Banerjee

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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George-Marios Angeletos

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Philippe Aghion

London School of Economics and Political Science

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C. Fritz Foley

National Bureau of Economic Research

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L. Kamran Bilir

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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