Authors
Sourafel Girma, David Greenaway, Richard Kneller
Publication date
2003/8/1
Journal
Economics letters
Volume
80
Issue
2
Pages
181-187
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
As a result of the rapid growth of microeconometric studies of exporting firms, we now know quite a lot about the performance dynamics of firms that enter export markets. We know much less about what happens to performance when firms exit. We apply a difference-in-differences methodology based on matched firms and analyse the performance dynamics of firms in UK manufacturing that exited export markets over the period 1991–1997. We find that on average, exit from foreign markets has a negative albeit weak effect on total factor productivity, but this is confined to the year of exit as we fail to detect any discernible productivity effect due to exit in subsequent years. By contrast, exit is found to have a deleterious effect on both employment and output dynamics. The effect on output is sizeable and quite persistent, suggesting that domestic demand was not able to make up for the loss in foreign market shares.
Total citations
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