research paper series

Similar documents
OUTSOURCING AND TRADE IN A SPATIAL WORLD

Transport Costs and North-South Trade

CHAPTER 2 FOUNDATIONS OF MODERN TRADE THEORY: COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE

Federico Esposito. 41 Trumbull Street, Third floor Dept. of Economics, Yale University

Substitution in Markusen s Classic Trade and Factor Movement Complementarity Models* Maurice Schiff World Bank and IZA

Slicing the Value Chain Internationaly: Empirical Evidence on the Offshoring Strategy by French Firms

UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM. Discussion Papers in Economics

Annex 3: Formal Specifications of Competitiveness Measures

Location, Productivity, and Trade

Foreign direct investment and export under imperfectly competitive host-country input market

Research Philosophy. David R. Agrawal University of Michigan. 1 Themes

research paper series

Formation of North-South Agreements and Institutional Distance

Remember the reasons for trade:

FDI and trade: complements and substitutes

Trade Protection and Liberalization: From efficiency to meeting social objectives

Theoretical Framework

Christian Mugele und Monika Schnitzer: Organization of Multinational Activities and Ownership Structure

Session 5 Evidence-based trade policy formulation: impact assessment of trade liberalization and FTA

International Economics Econ 4401 Midterm Exam Key

FDI with Reverse Imports and Hollowing Out

Using Trade Policy to Influence Firm Location. This Version: 9 May 2006 PRELIMINARY AND INCOMPLETE DO NOT CITE

International Economics B 9. Monopolistic competition and international trade: Firm Heterogeneity

research paper series

Economics 689 Texas A&M University

Chapter 5. Resources and Trade: The Heckscher- Ohlin Model

Optimal education policies and comparative advantage

Expansion of Network Integrations: Two Scenarios, Trade Patterns, and Welfare

Chapter 5. Partial Equilibrium Analysis of Import Quota Liberalization: The Case of Textile Industry. ISHIDO Hikari. Introduction

Sam Bucovetsky und Andreas Haufler: Preferential tax regimes with asymmetric countries

An Estimate of the Effect of Currency Unions on Trade and Growth* First draft May 1; revised June 6, 2000

The Real Explanation of the PPP Puzzle

FDI Spillovers and Intellectual Property Rights

INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND FACTOR MOBILITY

Introduction to New New Trade Theory

Trading Company and Indirect Exports

Economics 230a, Fall 2014 Lecture Note 12: Introduction to International Taxation

Trade Policy: From efficiency to meeting social objectives

Trade Liberalization and Labor Unions

Preferential Trade Agreements. Pravin Krishna Johns Hopkins University

Trade Openness, Economic Growth and Unemployment Reduction in Arab Region

3. Trade and Development

International Economics dr Wioletta Nowak. Lecture 2

THE APPLICATION OF ESSENTIAL ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES IN ARMED FORCES

Statistical Analysis in the Area of Trade in Services

Lecture 14. Multinational Firms. 2. Dunning's OLI, joint inputs, firm versus plant-level scale economies

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 11. Classical and Keynesian Macro Analyses

International Trade. Heckscher-Ohlin Model and Political Economy of Trade

Partial privatization as a source of trade gains

The World Economy from a Distance

Chapter 11 International Trade and Economic Development

Growth & Development

Growth with Time Zone Differences

3 Dollarization and Integration

Does Encourage Inward FDI Always Be a Dominant Strategy for Domestic Government? A Theoretical Analysis of Vertically Differentiated Industry

1. A Japanese car manufacturer acquires an Italian producer of car tires. This is an

Unilateral Tax Reform: Border Adjusted Taxes, Cash Flow Taxes, and Transfer Pricing

A multi-country approach to multi-stage production. Jim Markusen, Boulder Tony Venables, LSE

Chapter 4. Specific Factors and Income Distribution

The Time Cost of Documents to Trade

International Tax Reforms with Flexible Prices

Trade Performance in Internationally Fragmented Production Networks: Concepts and Measures

Analysis of trade..., Tri Kurnia Septiawan, FE UI, 2010.

Global Value Chains, Foreign Direct Investment, and Taxation

Trade effects based on general equilibrium

International trade and offshoring

Outsourcing under Incomplete Information

Unemployment, tax evasion and the slippery slope framework

Lecture 14. Multinational Firms. 2. Dunning's OLI, joint inputs, firm versus plant-level scale economies

The Centre for Spatial Economics

Switching Costs and the foreign Firm s Entry

The Canadian Economy. Chapter 3: The Canadian Economy in a Global Setting. The Canadian Economy. The Canadian Economy. The Canadian Economy

Measuring the Effects of Endogenous Policies on Economic Integration

Tariff Structure, Trade Expansion and Canadian Protectionism from

Factors that Affect Fiscal Externalities in an Economic Union

Diskussionsbeiträge aus dem Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften der Universität Duisburg-Essen, Campus Essen

Part Two: International Trade Policy. Chapter 8 Trade Restrictions: Tariffs

Perhaps the most striking aspect of the current

Linking Microsimulation and CGE models

Gravity Redux: Structural Estimation of Gravity Equations with Asymmetric Bilateral Trade Costs

License and Entry Decisions for a Firm with a Cost Advantage in an International Duopoly under Convex Cost Functions

INTERNATIONAL TRADE: THEORY AND POLICY (HO)

International Trade Lecture 5: Increasing Returns to Scale and Monopolistic Competition

Emission Taxes, Relocation, and Quality Differences

CHAPTER 2 FOUNDATIONS OF MODERN TRADE THEORY: COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE

Firms in International Trade. Lecture 2: The Melitz Model

Chapter 6. The Theory of Tariffs and Quotas. Copyright 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.

Econ 223 Lecture notes 2: Determination of output and income Classical closed economy equilibrium

EXPLORING POSSIBILITIES FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN SMALL AMD MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES IN THE NORTH-EASTERN REGION (NER)

Book Review of The Theory of Corporate Finance

International Fragmentation, Specialization and Comparative Advantage: An Asian-Pacific Input-Output Approach

The Tax Gradient. Do Local Sales Taxes Reduce Tax Dierentials at State Borders? David R. Agrawal. University of Georgia: January 24, 2012

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

CESifo / DELTA Conference on Strategies for Reforming Pension Schemes

Anthony Bende Nabende. Abstract

Case Studies from WTO Chair Holders

Competition and risk taking in a differentiated banking sector

M14/3/ECONO/HP3/ENG/TZ0/XX/M MARKSCHEME. May 2014 ECONOMICS. Higher Level. Paper pages

An Evaluation of the Relationship Between Private and Public R&D Funds with Consideration of Level of Government

The World Bank Revised Minimum Standard Model: Concepts and limitations

Transcription:

research paper series Globalisation, Productivity and Technology Research Paper 2004/36 Outsourcing and Trade in a Spatial World by Hartmut Egger and Peter Egger The Centre acknowledges financial support from The Leverhulme Trust under Programme Grant F114/BF

The Authors Hartmut Egger is Assistant Professor at the University of Zurich and an External Research Fellow of the Leverhulme Centre for Research on Globalisation and Economic Policy. Peter Egger is Professor of Economics at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Ifo member, and External Research Fellow of the Leverhulme Centre for Research on Globalisation and Economic Policy. Acknowledgements We wish to thank Jeff Bergstrand, Paola Conconi, Jonathan Eaton, Josef Falkinger, Anke Gerber, Holger Görg, Tom Gresik, Rudi Kerschbamer, Jim Markusen, Szylvia Papai, Kali Rath, Armin Schmutzler and Ian Wooton for helpful comments and suggestions. We have benefited from discussions with participants at the Midwest International Economics Fall 2002 Meeting, the SAET 2003 conference, the annual NOEG meeting 2004, the IXth DEGIT conference 2004, the ESEM conference 2004, the ETSG meeting 2004, and at research seminars at the University of Innsbruck, the University of Notre Dame, and the University of Zurich.

Outsourcing and Trade in a Spatial World by Hartmut Egger and Peter Egger Abstract This paper provides an analysis of outsourcing and trade in a spatial model à la Hotelling. In this setting, we discuss the trade-off between transport-cost-related disadvantages and outsourcing-induced production cost advantages of a large economy. The model gives a rich picture of possible trade and welfare effects of a movement towards free trade and points to the role of national transport costs for explaining these effects. Moreover, it gives economic insights in the countries incentives to lower tariffs and to participate in free trade agreements with partner countries that differ in size and economic capacity. JEL classification: F12; F15; L13 Keywords: International outsourcing; International trade; Spatial competition Outline 1. Introduction 2. Basic model set up 3. Autarky equilibrium 4. Free trade equilibrium 5. Welfare effects of trade liberalization 6. Extensions and further discussion 7. Conclusions

Non-Technical Summary Modern industrial production follows the paradigm of a high degree of fragmentation of production between firms both within and across national borders. Consequently, the determinants but also the consequences of the ever smaller range of activities that are carried out within the boundaries of a single firm have reached the limelight of interest of economists in recent years. As far as the international trade literature is considered, many of the available models on outsourcing of production stages either ignore trade costs at all or they only account for international barriers to trade. Hence, spatial aspects of countries and the associated national transport costs are typically not considered. Nonetheless, the consideration of and the distinction between national and international trade costs obviously represents an interesting feature of a model on both final and intermediate goods transactions and outsourcing decisions. To provide a rigorous discussion on how country size and the magnitude of national transport costs interact in determining both the pattern of trade and the welfare effects of trade liberalization is the goal of this paper. For this, we set up a spatial model à la Hotelling, which allows us to account for the geographical dimension of countries, hence, both national and international trade costs, in an adequate way. In such a setting, country size has two effects. On the one hand, country size is positively related to an economy s sheer geographical space. A larger geographical dimension implies for a given number of final goods producers a larger distance between consumers and producers. Therefore, transport cost expenditures will be higher. This leads to a transport-cost-related size disadvantage of a large economy. On the other hand, the geographical size of a country is positively correlated with its population size. Accordingly, the degree of specialization may also be higher in large economies. This argument is closely related to Adam Smith s idea of the division of labour. Consequently, larger economies should be characterized by a higher degree of fragmentation and national outsourcing under autarky. This gives rise to an outsourcing-induced production cost advantage of a large economy. Based on this idea, we investigate the trade-off of being large: the transport-cost-related size disadvantage and the outsourcing-related production cost advantage. With regard to the trade pattern between two asymmetrically sized economies, our analysis reveals the main fundamentals, determining which country exports and which country imports final output. Based on these insights, the presented model allows us to discuss the role of national transport costs for the welfare effects of trade liberalization. This can be done for both the short run with given firm locations and the long run where firms can change the location of their production plant. It turns out that the final goods exporting country always benefits from trade liberalization, while the welfare effects are less clear-cut for the final goods importing country. However, if there is outsourcing in the free trade equilibrium both large and small countries can simultaneously gain from trade liberalization. This result points to the relevance of outsourcing opportunities in understanding the pace of global integration in recent years. Specifically, it provides an economic reasoning for the willingness of countries to lower their tariffs and to enter a free trade agreement with partner countries that differ in size and economic capacity. Our analysis also contributes to the discussion on market thickness effects of international openness. Similar to earlier studies, we can show that falling trade barriers have an impact on the structure of industrial production. Hence, they determine whether firms produce integrated or outsource manufacture of inputs. However, our results make clear that this may lead to devastating effects of trade liberalization regarding the degree of vertical fragmentation in the production of final output. This is a novel insight which is in contrast to McLaren's "law" of increasing outsourcing. The potential negative effects of trade

liberalization on the intensity of fragmentation and outsourcing may also be of particular interest for future empirical research on this issue.

( ) ( ) = + +

( ) ( ) = + ( ) ( ) ( ) ρ = ρ < ( ) ( ) + ( ) L ( ) ( ) + + t

L > > > < < > t