2012
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2045226
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Multi-Product Firms and Exchange Rate Fluctuations

Abstract: Esteban Rossi-Hansberg, and trade workshop participants at Princeton University for many helpful comments and suggestions. Many thanks to João De Negri and IPEA-Brasília for granting access to Secex and RAIS. Comments and questions are welcome. Please contact

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Cited by 57 publications
(108 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…For a multi-product exporter, we might expect the prices of the most productive product to be more sensitive to real exchange rate movements than other products of the same firm. In fact, Chatterjee et al (2013) show that producer price increases more pronouncedly for products closer to the core competency. Since we do not observe productivity at the product level of a firm, we create two export rank variables in terms of sales, which serve as additional performance measures.…”
Section: Extensionsmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…For a multi-product exporter, we might expect the prices of the most productive product to be more sensitive to real exchange rate movements than other products of the same firm. In fact, Chatterjee et al (2013) show that producer price increases more pronouncedly for products closer to the core competency. Since we do not observe productivity at the product level of a firm, we create two export rank variables in terms of sales, which serve as additional performance measures.…”
Section: Extensionsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…four-digit HS sector in columns (5) and (6), and then follow BMM and Chatterjee et al (2013) to include only single-product firms in columns (7) and (8), where we define single-product firms as those having only one product exported for a firm-destination-year triplet. 9 The patterns remain qualitatively unchanged.…”
Section: Benchmark Regressionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Other related papers that have focused on the impact of exchange rate movements include: Forbes (,b), who examines the impact of large currency depreciations on firm performance; Kandilov and Leblebicioğlu (), who investigate the effects of exchange rate volatility on firm investment; Araújo and Paz (), who study the impact of currency devaluations on wages for different types of firms and employees; and Tang and Zhang () and Chatterjee et al. (), who estimate the effects of exchange rate movements on product scope, churning and concentration of multi‐product exporters.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%