Experimental Design
Sample and Setting
We conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) involving 5,000 small export-oriented businesses located in three of China’s most prominent wholesale and export markets: Huaqiangbei (Guangdong), Yiwu (Zhejiang), and Wuai (Liaoning). These hubs are selected due to their concentration of small businesses highly dependent on international trade.
Eligible businesses are identified via local commercial registries and market management records. All participating firms are formally registered, have fewer than 50 employees, and derive at least 30% of annual revenue from export activities.
Experimental Details
Randomization and Groups
Firms are stratified by market (Huaqiangbei, Yiwu, Wuai) and sector (e.g., electronics, textiles, general merchandise) to ensure balanced representation. Within strata, firms are randomly assigned (via computer algorithm) to one of five experimental arms:
Foreign Expert – Optimistic Forecast (n ≈ 1,000): Receives a standardized briefing attributed to reputable foreign trade experts, summarizing optimistic projections for China’s export outlook (e.g., stable policies, new opportunities).
Foreign Expert – Pessimistic Forecast (n ≈ 1,000): Receives a briefing from foreign experts emphasizing risks and uncertainties in the global trade environment (e.g., escalating trade frictions).
Domestic Expert – Optimistic Forecast (n ≈ 1,000): Receives an optimistic briefing attributed to prominent domestic experts, highlighting positive prospects for Chinese exporters.
Domestic Expert – Pessimistic Forecast (n ≈ 1,000): Receives a pessimistic briefing from domestic experts, stressing challenges such as trade barriers or policy headwinds.
Control Group (n ≈ 1,000): Receives a neutral briefing, with generic business news unrelated to trade policy or geopolitical risk.
Randomization is implemented using re-randomization to achieve balance on baseline variables, including owner age, gender, education, business age, total assets, and recent export revenue. We repeat random allocations until key variables have maximum t-statistics below 1.25 and average below 0.35 across groups.
Intervention Delivery
Briefings are distributed to business owners/managers via email or secure online platform. Each briefing is of equal length and format, and each is clearly attributed (foreign/domestic expert, optimistic/pessimistic tone). Owners are explicitly told that the information comes from leading experts in international trade.
Data Collection
Baseline Survey: Administered pre-intervention to capture firm characteristics, export patterns, pricing strategies, investment plans, risk perceptions, and owner demographics.
Follow-up Surveys: Conducted at 3, 12, and 24 months post-intervention to track changes in export strategy, pricing, revenue, business confidence, risk management, and investment/employment intentions.
Administrative data (where available) will be used to cross-check self-reported export volumes and business activity.
Primary Outcomes
Adjustments in export strategies (e.g., market diversification, volume changes)
Changes in export pricing or markups
Business confidence and expectations regarding exports
Investment and employment plans related to export operations
Adoption of risk management practices