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Leticia Juárez

Researchers at the IDB

Leticia Juarez portrait - Inter American Development Bank - IDB Research
Leticia Juárez
Economics Specialist
[email protected]

Leticia Juárez is an economist in the Research Department at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), where she specializes in international economics, macroeconomics, and environmental economics. She recently completed her Ph.D. in Economics at the University of Michigan, with a research focus on exchange rate pass-through in buyer-seller dynamics where buyers hold market power. 

Her work also examines the effects of debt on exchange rate pass-through and explores the complementarity of trade credit and bank loans for exporters. Leticia previously earned a master’s degree in economics from the University of San Andres in Argentina and has experience working in economic research at the IDB. Her current research interests include the intersection of exchange rates, trade finance, and market structure in emerging economies.

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Latest Studies at the IDB

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This paper studies the role of buyer market power in determining the response of international prices to exchange rate changes (i.e., exchange rate pass-through). Using a novel dataset of the universe of Colombian export transactions that links Colombian exporters (sellers) to their foreign importers (buyers), I document three facts: i) most Colombian exports are concentrated in a few foreign buyers in each market, ii) the same seller charges different prices to different buyers in the same product and destination, and iii) markets with a higher concentration of sales among buyers display lower exchange rate pass-through. Motivated by these stylized facts, I propose an open economy model of oligopsony, a market with large number of sellers and a few buyers, that accounts for buyer market power in international markets and its consequences for price determination in international transactions. The model shows that larger foreign buyers pay a marked-down price, i.e., a price below the marginal product value for the buyer. Most importantly, these markdowns are flexible and play a role when adjusting prices to exchange rate shocks. I derive a model-based equation relating pass-through to buyer size and estimate it on the micro transaction level data for Colombia. I find that after an exchange rate shock, sellers connected to larger buyers face more moderate changes in their prices in the seller currency (i.e., lower exchange rate pass-through) than those connected to small buyers. Pass-through ranges from 1% for firms connected with the largest buyers to 17% for firms connected with the smallest buyers. I use the estimates from the empirical analysis to calibrate the model and propose a counterfactual where buyer market power is eliminated. Under this scenario, sellers' revenues increase; however, the price in seller currency is more responsive to exchange rate shocks.

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Latest Blog Posts from Leticia

The Hidden Costs of Non-Tariff Barriers The Hidden Costs of Non-Tariff Barriers The Tradeoff in Large Foreign Firms' Dominance of  Export Markets The Tradeoff in Large Foreign Firms' Dominance of  Export Markets
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