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Marc Melitz

Marc Melitz

Harvard University · Economics

Active 2000–2026

h-index70
Citations45.7k
Papers19336 last 5y
Funding
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About

Marc Melitz is the David A. Wells Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University. He holds a B.A. from Haverford College (1989), an M.S.B.A. from the Robert Smith School of Business (1992), and a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan (2000). He is a fellow of the Econometric Society and is affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), CESifo, and the Kiel Institute for the World Economy. His broad research interests are in international trade and investment. More specifically, he studies producer-level responses to globalization and their implications for aggregate trade and investment patterns. His research has been funded by the Sloan Foundation and by the NSF.

Research topics

  • Macroeconomics
  • Business
  • Monetary economics
  • Economics
  • Econometrics

Selected publications

  • Industrial Policies for Multi-Stage Production: The Battle for Battery-Powered Vehicles

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01

    preprintOpen access
  • The Laffer curve for rules of origin

    Journal of International Economics · 2024-03-01 · 14 citations

    articleOpen accessSenior author
  • Opposing Firm-Level Responses to the China Shock: Output Competition versus Input Supply

    American Economic Journal Economic Policy · 2024-05-01 · 12 citations

    articleOpen access

    We decompose the “China shock” into two components that induce different adjustments for firms exposed to Chinese exports: an output shock affecting firms selling goods that compete with similar imported Chinese goods, and an input supply shock affecting firms using inputs similar to the imported Chinese goods. Combining French accounting, customs, and patent information at the firm level, we show that the output shock is detrimental to firms’ sales, employment, and innovation. Moreover, this negative impact is concentrated in low-productivity firms. On the other hand, the impact of the input supply shock is reversed. (JEL D22, D24, F14, J23, L25, O31, O34)

  • Chapter 6 Trade and Innovation

    Harvard University Press eBooks · 2023-08-16

    book-chapter1st authorCorresponding
  • Contents

    Harvard University Press eBooks · 2023-08-16

    paratextOpen access
  • The unintended consequences of high regional content requirements

    2023-10-26

    book-chapterOpen accessSenior author

    Rules of origin (RoOs) are a common feature of regional trade agreements that fall short of full custom unions. Two of the most important trade agreements, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the European Union (EU), recently enacted major changes to those rules. The 2020 USMCA agreement replacing NAFTA made those rules much stricter. Meanwhile, following its exit from the EU customs union, Britain and the remaining EU27 had to draw up new rules of origin for the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA). This chapter quantifies the main trade-offs involved in setting the strictness of RoOs in the context of the automobile industry. A more stringent agreement can raise or lower regional parts production, but it inevitably raises prices. Fitting our model to data on the use of NAFTA-origin parts in cars assembled within the region, we calibrate the key parameters that govern the responses to stricter RoOs. We then apply the calibrated model to evaluate the switch from NAFTA to the USMCA as well as other counterfactuals of interest.

  • Aggregate-Demand Amplification of Supply Disruptions: The Entry-Exit Multiplier

    Apollo (University of Cambridge) · 2023-10-20

    articleOpen accessSenior author

    Due to its impact on nominal firm profits, price rigidity amplifies the response of entry and exit to supply shocks. When those supply shocks are negative, such as those following supply chain disruptions, this “entry-exit multiplier” substantially magnifies the associated welfare losses—especially when wages are also rigid. This is in stark contrast to the benchmark New Keynesian model (NK), which predicts a positive output gap in response to that same shock under the same monetary policy. Endogenous entry-exit thus radically changes the consequences of nominal rigidities. In addition to the aggregate-demand amplification of supply disruptions, our model also reconciles the response of hours worked across the NK and RBC models. And unlike the standard NK model, our model can also be used to evaluate how monetary expansions can alleviate or even eliminate the negative output gap induced by supply disruptions.

  • Economie Internationale (12e ed.)

    2022-09-01

    bookSenior author
  • Replication data for The Heterogeneous Impact of Market Size on Innovation: Evidence from French Firm-Level Exports

    Harvard Dataverse · 2022-03-14

    datasetOpen accessSenior author

    The Heterogeneous Impact of Market Size on Innovation: Evidence from French Firm-Level Exports (P. Aghion, A. Bergeaud, M. Lequien and M. Melitz).

  • International trade and innovation

    Handbook of international economics · 2022-01-01 · 38 citations

    book-chapterSenior authorCorresponding

Frequent coauthors

Education

  • Ph.D., Economics

    Harvard University

    1996
  • B.A., Economics

    University of California, Berkeley

    1991

Awards & honors

  • Fellow of the Econometric Society
  • Sloan Foundation funding
  • NSF funding
  • Resume-aware match score
  • Save to shortlist
  • AI-drafted outreach

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