Global Value Chains, Horizontal Intra-Industry Trade and the Heterogeneous Firm

This paper examines global value chains at the level of the heterogeneous firm. The context is a world of horizontal intra-industry trade, characterized by imperfect competition and product differentiation at the firm level. Standard microeconomic tools are employed to assess the effects of inter-fi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFrontiers of economics in China Vol. 13; no. 1; pp. 68 - 82
Main Author Arndt, Sven W
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Beijing Higher Education Press 01.03.2018
Higher Education Press Limited Company
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Summary:This paper examines global value chains at the level of the heterogeneous firm. The context is a world of horizontal intra-industry trade, characterized by imperfect competition and product differentiation at the firm level. Standard microeconomic tools are employed to assess the effects of inter-firm dissimilarities in both demand and supply on firms’ responses to changes in trade policy. In this set-up, dissimilarities in firm characteristics play roles similar to factor endowments and technology differences in traditional trade models. When cross-border production sharing (“fragmentation”) is introduced into this framework, those differences in firm characteristics determine the degree to which individual firms will enter into production networks. In this context, horizontal and vertical intra-industry trade elements interact in their effects on firm decisions. Traditional comparative advantage considerations still govern the choice of off-shored activities, while direct competition between imports and exports expands the range of possible outcomes. Finally, it is shown that cross-border production sharing reduces the sensitivity of firms to variations in exchange rates, matching a phenomenon that has been observed in traditional country-level models.
Bibliography:intra-product
heterogeneous firms
specialization
global value chains
exchange-rate elasticities
intra-industry trade
ISSN:1673-3444
1673-3568
DOI:10.3868/s060-007-018-0006-8