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The increase in debt we capture at the commuting-zone level might not have resulted from active levering up, but rather by migration patterns across differentially exposed areas. Therefore, using the CCP data, we confirm that our baseline results hold at the individual level. We exploit the richness of this data to compare exposure to import competition with the level of price appreciation.
We hypothesise that the ability of exposed workers to react to labour income shocks with debt should be larger in areas where house prices appreciated. This is the case. Households in exposed areas where prices have appreciated were more likely to extract home equity by increasing mortgage borrowing. We examine the aftermath of this increase in leverage during the Great Recession of 2008-2010. Using individual-level data, we find worse outcomes during the crisis for households located in regions that were more exposed to import penetration.
In textbooks, the life-cycle consumer uses debt to smooth consumption when income shocks are transitory, but the displacement of US manufacturing jobs induced by Chinese import penetration seems long-lasting. So why is household debt sensitive to import competition? The fact that exposed households reacted to this shock by taking on more debt would be consistent with many hypotheses.
Debt growth might have been concentrated among workers for whom the shock was effectively transitory, namely, those with higher education backgrounds who were able to switch to less exposed industries.
Alternatively, although the displacement effect of import penetration seems permanent in hindsight, it might have initially been perceived as transitory. This led workers to borrow to smooth consumption.
Credit demand may also have been driven by ratchet effects in consumption. In this case affected households increased their credit demand to maintain consumption levels, even if the shock was perceived as being long-lasting.
This research underscores an important, yet overlooked, driver of the dramatic increase in household debt in the 2000s. Two phenomena that impacted the US economy in the years preceding the Great Recession – the dramatic rise in household debt; and the unprecedented increase in import competition, triggered by the expansion of China and other low-wage countries in global markets – are, in fact, intimately linked.
Authors’ note: The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or The Federal Reserve System.
References
Autor, D H, D Dorn and G H Hanson (2013), “The China Syndrome: Local Labor Market Effects of Import Competition in the United States," American Economic Review, 103 (6), 2121-68.
Barrot, J-N, E Loualiche, and J Sauvagnat (2016), “The Globalization Risk Premium," MIT Sloan Working Paper.
Barrot, Barrot, J-N, E Loualiche, M Plosser and J Sauvagnat (2106), “Import Competition and Household Debt," MIT Sloan Working Paper.
Mian, A and A Sufi (2009), “The Consequences of Mortgage Credit Expansion: Evidence from the US Mortgage Default Crisis," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 124 (4), 1449-1496.
Mian, A and A Sufi (2011), “House Prices, Home Equity-Based Borrowing, and the US Household Leverage Crisis," American Economic Review, 101 (5), 2132-56.
Pierce, J R and P K Schott (2016), “The Surprisingly Swift Decline of US Manufacturing Employment," American Economic Review, 106 (7), 1632-62.
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