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In this study, we construct a new measurement of a firm's trade risk expectation. We investigate how exporters' innovation strategies respond to trade protection and their risk expectation by studying the global anti-dumping investigations against China. Specifically, using information on targeted products, we identify the trade risk level of each firm. We then develop a theoretical model to analyze how a multi-product firm adjusts its innovation strategies by its trade risk expectation when affected by anti-dumping measures, and the spillover effects of trade risk expectation on the firm's innovation strategies. This model predicts that first, affected firms will increase their R&D investment and innovation output in response to the increase of trade risk. Second, firms are more likely to choose high-quality innovation when their trade risk expectations increase. Third, for unaffected firms, an increase in trade risk expectation will lead to a growth in their innovation outputs. These predictions are aligned with the Chinese data, which are matched with an anti-dumping dataset from the Global Anti-dumping Database and several firm-level datasets. After changing the definition of trade risk expectation, excluding the cases also affected by countervailing measures and those with a zero anti-dumping tax rate, our results remain constant. This gives us further confidence that exporters with higher trade risks are more responsive to trade protection.
Li et al. (Fri,) studied this question.