“…Some of these papers focus on the effects of crises in emerging economies (e.g., Khwaja and Mian (2008), Kalemli-Ozcan, Kamil, and Villegas-Sanchez (2016)), while others study the 2008 financial crisis in the U.S. (e.g., Chodorow-Reich (2013), Chava and Purnanandam (2011), Adrian, Colla, and Shin (2012), Montoriol-Garriga and Wang (2012), Duygan-Bump, Levkov, and Montoriol-Garriga (2014) and Greenstone, Mas, and Nguyen (2014)), the European Sovereign Debt crisis (e.g., Jiménez et al (2014), Bottero, Lenzu, and Mezzanotti (2015) and Alfaro, García-Santana, and Moral-Benito (2019)) or the real estate crisis in Japan (e.g., Gan (2007) and Amiti and Weinstein (2018)). 4 An important contribution of this line of research has been to develop an approach to identify credit supply shocks based on the observation that, as in our model, credit relationships are sticky and firms that borrow from a healthier, less exposed bank (or network of banks) have less difficulty obtaining credit after a crisis.…”