Working PaperFirst publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-2286

The Lumpiness of German Exports and Imports of Goods

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Chronological data

Date of first publication2016-04-29
Date of publication in PubData 2025-09-02

Language of the resource

English

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Part of ISSN: 1860-5508
Working Paper Series in Economics

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Case provider

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Abstract

This paper looks at a hitherto neglected extensive margin of international trade by investigating for the first time the frequency at which German exporters and importers trade a given good with a given country. Imports and exports show a high degree of lumpiness. In a given year about half of all firm-good-country combinations are recorded only once or twice for trade with EU-countries, and this is the case for more than 60 percent of all firm-good-country combinations in trade with non-EU countries. The frequency of recorded transactions tends to decline with an increase in the number of transactions per year. This is in accordance with the presence of per-shipment fixed costs that provide an incentive for trading firms to engage in cross-border transactions infrequently. Empirical models show that for Germany the frequency of transactions at the firm-good-country level tends to decrease with an increase in per-shipment costs when unobserved firm and goods characteristics are controlled for.

Keywords

Lumpiness of Trade; Import; Export; Germany

Number of the series contribution

359

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DDC

330 :: Wirtschaft

Creation Context

Research