Research
Publication
"Property Division upon Divorce and Household Decisions." (with Juan Pantano, Han Ye, and Junjian Yi). Journal of Human Resources, March 2023, 58 (2) 532-560.
Before 2011, Chinese married couples expected equal-division of housing property upon divorce even when the home was titled only under the husband’s name and bought by the husband before marriage. In 2011, a Supreme Court decision led to enforcement of a title-based regime, only for housing property purchased before marriage and brought into the marriage by one of the spouses. We investigate the effects of this legal change using a difference-in-differences design. We find that this legal change weakened wives' intrahousehold bargaining power, leading to reductions in their leisure, increased consumption of male-favored goods, and reduced investment in children.
Before 2011, Chinese married couples expected equal-division of housing property upon divorce even when the home was titled only under the husband’s name and bought by the husband before marriage. In 2011, a Supreme Court decision led to enforcement of a title-based regime, only for housing property purchased before marriage and brought into the marriage by one of the spouses. We investigate the effects of this legal change using a difference-in-differences design. We find that this legal change weakened wives' intrahousehold bargaining power, leading to reductions in their leisure, increased consumption of male-favored goods, and reduced investment in children.
Working Paper
"Regional Trade Integration and Input Sourcing Patterns of Multinational Enterprise Plants: Evidence from the ECFA." (with Bingjing Li)
This paper studies the impacts of regional trade integration on the input sourcing patterns of firms engaging in multinational production. We examine the responses of Taiwanese MNC affiliates in mainland China around the time of a single event --- the signing of the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) between the Mainland and Taiwan in June 2010. Using data on firm-level ownership linkages in conjunction with transaction-level trade flows between 2006 and 2015, we find strong evidence that in response to input tariff reductions, firms increased imports not only from members but also from non-member trade partners. The scale effect through the demand response to lower input costs appears to dominate the direct substitution effect from the enhanced trade relation across the Strait, leading to a trade creation effect outside the integrated bloc. Moreover, to a large extent, the trade created outside the bloc appears to be contained within multinationals' organizational boundary. In particular, for contract-intensive products, firms mainly increased sourcing from related parties. The findings suggest that MNC production networks strengthen the trade creation effect of regional trade agreements by reducing contractual frictions and search frictions along input-output linkages.
This paper studies the impacts of regional trade integration on the input sourcing patterns of firms engaging in multinational production. We examine the responses of Taiwanese MNC affiliates in mainland China around the time of a single event --- the signing of the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) between the Mainland and Taiwan in June 2010. Using data on firm-level ownership linkages in conjunction with transaction-level trade flows between 2006 and 2015, we find strong evidence that in response to input tariff reductions, firms increased imports not only from members but also from non-member trade partners. The scale effect through the demand response to lower input costs appears to dominate the direct substitution effect from the enhanced trade relation across the Strait, leading to a trade creation effect outside the integrated bloc. Moreover, to a large extent, the trade created outside the bloc appears to be contained within multinationals' organizational boundary. In particular, for contract-intensive products, firms mainly increased sourcing from related parties. The findings suggest that MNC production networks strengthen the trade creation effect of regional trade agreements by reducing contractual frictions and search frictions along input-output linkages.