Import Competition and the Great US Employment Sag of the 2000s
National Bureau of Economic Research · Massachusetts Institute of Technology · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Even before the Great Recession, US employment growth was unimpressive. Between 2000 and 2007, the economy gave back the considerable employment gains achieved during the 1990s, with a historic contraction in manufacturing employment being a prime contributor to the slump. We estimate that import competition from China, which surged after 2000, was a major force behind both recent reductions in US manufacturing employment and—through input-output linkages and other general equilibrium channels—weak overall US job growth. Our central estimates suggest job losses from rising Chinese import competition over 1999–2011 in the range of 2.0–2.4 million.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 148.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 67
Authors
5- DADaron AcemoğluCorresponding
National Bureau of Economic Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- DADavid Autor
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, National Bureau of Economic Research
- DDDavid Dorn
Economic Policy Institute, Centre for Economic Policy Research, University of Zurich
- GHGordon Hanson
National Bureau of Economic Research
- BMBrendan M. Price
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Topics & keywords
- Economics
- China
- Competition (biology)
- Labour economics
- Great recession
- Slump
- Recession
- Job loss
- Decent work and economic growth