Abstract

This paper examines the factors that increase the probability of entry into exporting. Using a panel of U.S. manufacturing plants, we test for the role of plant characteristics, spillovers from neighboring exporters, entry costs, and government export promotion expenditures. Entry and exit in the export market by U.S. plants is substantial, past exporters are apt to reenter, and plants are likely to export in consecutive years. However, we find that entry costs are significant and spillovers from the export activity of other plants are negligible. State export promotion expenditures have no significant effect on the probability of exporting. Plant characteristics, especially those indicative of past success,…

Citation impact

1,545
total citations
FWCI
62.88
Percentile
100%
References
21
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Promotion (chess)
  • Business
  • Panel data
  • International trade
  • Government (linguistics)
  • Industrial organization
  • International economics
  • Economics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Partnerships for the goals
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