Tracing the International Transmission of a Crisis Through Multinational Firms
We show that multinational firms transmit shocks across countries through their internal capital markets. We study a credit supply shock to parent firms in Germany. International affiliates outside Germany supported their parents through internal lending, became financially constrained themselves, and experienced lower real growth. We find that managers were "Darwinist" with respect to international affiliates but "Socialist" in the home country, that internal capital markets transmitted the credit shock more strongly than a non-financial shock, and that access to developed credit markets attenuated the real effects. The total real impact of shock transmission through multinationals on foreign economies was large.
Published Versions
MARCUS BIERMANN & KILIAN HUBER, 2024. "Tracing the International Transmission of a Crisis through Multinational Firms," The Journal of Finance, vol 79(3), pages 1789-1829. citation courtesy of