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Comments on Tang and Wu’s Trade Credit Bank Credit and Financial Crises: The Case of Taiwan Andrew K. Rose UC Berkeley, CEPR and NBER Part of an Ongoing Debate • Massive trade collapse in Great Recession – Severe, sudden, synchronized (sectors, countries) – Bigger collapse than GDP • Bigger than Great Depression (Eichengreen and O’Rourke) – Why? 2 Potential Explanations 1. Demand for manufacturing goods collapsed – Especially durables • Alternatively inventories 2. Issues with supply chains – Perhaps a new normal? 3. (Artificial) Trade Frictions rose – Traditional Protectionism • Evenett, Global Trade Alert – Alternatively: trade credit 3 Work on Trade Credit and Great Recession • Much Evidence finds role for credit constraints reducing trade – Manova: credit constraints affect exports – Amiti and Weinstein: Japanese exporters most affected use banks most affected – Feenstra et al: more evidence on exports 4 Still, Much Dispute • Most find small role for trade credit in collapse • Alternative explanations work better – Alessandra et al – Levchenko et al – Eaton et al 5 Tang & Wu Contribute to Debate • Innovations include: 1. Better data (firm-level panel) 2. Compare trade and bank credit • • Substitutes or Complements? A: Varies with recession – Complements in 2001; substitutes in 2008-09 3. Compare recessions • 2001 dot-com vs. 2008-09 Great Recession 6 Lots of Strengths • Great Motivation • Terrific Literature Review • Careful data work 7 Things I would do differently 1. 2. 3. 4. Worry about Timing Add Crisis More Sensitivity Analysis Miscellaneous Gripes 8 1: Timing Issues • Choice of 2008Q4 (not 2008Q3) seems critical, arbitrary, unwarranted • When did the recession begin? 9 Taiwan Recession Began 2008Q3 10 Bumps in 2008Q4 (Little variation otherwise and … big excess supply of trade credit throughout) 11 Need to Choose Dates Carefully? • Do we Have to Choose Crisis Dates at all? • Instead: add comprehensive set of time effects, focus on those coefficients 12 2: Add Asian Financial Crisis • 2001, 2008—09 recessions relevant for Taiwan • But Asian financial crisis of 1997-98? – (Taiwan mildly affected) – Sample of firms here starts in 1995! – Can add third (regional) crisis at cost of some firms 13 3: Sensitivity Analysis • If stick with current methodology, show insensitivity with respect to exact dates • Alternative: use event-study on crises 14 4: Miscellaneous Gripes 1. Simultaneity: aren’t bank credit and trade credit potentially driven by same phenomena? 2. How important are these firms in Taiwanese manufacturing? GDP? 3. Selection bias important? Only firms listed throughout; no entry/exit 4. Interpolation makes me nervous; so does removing extreme values (especially in crisis!) 5. Way too many digits/coefficients in tables 15 Generalizability • Key Finding: 2001 and Great Recessions differ – Completely Plausible – But what about Future Recessions? – Idiosyncrasies reduce policy implications • Is Taiwan special/unusual? 16