Project Details
Credit-constrained firms in the global economy: Implications for competition, welfare, and inequality
Applicant
Professor Dr. Tobias Seidel
Subject Area
Economic Theory
Statistics and Econometrics
Statistics and Econometrics
Term
from 2014 to 2017
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 246216578
Financial market development facilitates access to external finance for firms. The international trade literature has so far focused on the effects of credit constraints for the volume and the pattern of international trade, but not on the implications for competition, welfare, and inequality. These are the main aspects of this research project.For each of these three aspects, we can identify three main goals:1. Theoretical models should identify key economic channels to better understand the nexus between financial market development (credit constraints) and competition, welfare, and inequality.2. Theoretical models should be quantified by means of structural estimation. We thereby obtain answers to questions like: How large are the competition and welfare effects of credit constraints? By how much is the distribution of income affected?3. As financial markets have substantial implications for the real economy, there is a lot of public interest in these issues. The project should therefore contribute to the policy debate by identifying several policy implications associated with the various economic channels.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
Switzerland
Participating Persons
Professor Dr. Peter Egger; Dr. Sergey Nigai