Fragmentation New Production Patterns in the World Economy

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2001-04-19
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

"Fragmentation" is a term used in this volume to describe cross-border component specialization and production-sharing. Examination of recent trade data suggests that offshore sourcing of parts and components, as well as offshore assembly, are assuming an increasing role in the world economy. The theoretical implications of this type of specialization are examined in several chapters with the aid of both Ricardian and Heckscher-Ohlin trade models. Production is first decomposed ("fragmented") into its constituent parts and activities, and then it is at this level that factor-intensitiesand technologies are calibrated. The implications of intra-product specialization and component trade are investigated under conditions of free, restricted, and preferential trade. The role of multinationals is explored and the importance of cross-border service-links among component activities isexamined.Overall, extension of the principle of comparative advantage beyond products to the realm of parts and components is welfare-enhancing. Industries take advantage of offshore sourcing in order to reduce costs and increase competitiveness. Component specialization offers new and additionalopportunities for the exploitation of scale economies. Across a broad range of conditions, it raises output and employment. Its effects on wages are spelled out. Trade between advanced, high-wage and developing low-wage countries is an obvious candidate for the two-way application of componentspecialization. The empirical part of the volume presents an evaluation of new data which allow the separation of trade in components and in final products. It also provides assessments of the role of component specialization in the trade of several countries and regions.In addition to their relevance for trade theorists and country specialists, the studies collected in this volume have interesting implications for the conduct of trade policy. They contradict claims that trade with low-wage countries must be welfare-reducing and they suggest new approaches toindustrialization and economic development.

Author Biography


Sven W. Arndt is C.M. Stone Professor of Money, Credit and Trade and Director, The Lowe Institute of Political Economy, Claremont McKenna College; President, The Commons Institute for International Studies. He is also Managing Editor, "North American Journal of Economics and Finance".
Henryk Kierzkowski is Professor of Economics at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1(16)
Sven W. Arndt
Henryk Kierzkowski
A Framework for Fragmentation
17(18)
Ronald W. Jones
Henryk Kierzkowski
Fragmentation across Cones
35(17)
Alan V. Deardorff
A Communication-Based Model of Global Production Fragmentation
52(24)
Richard G. Harris
Offshore Sourcing and Production Sharing in Preference Areas
76(12)
Sven W. Arndt
Some Causes and Consequences of Fragmentation
88(20)
Victoria Curzon Price
Just How Big is Global Production Sharing?
108(36)
Alexander J. Yeats
Globalization and Fragmentation: Evidence for the Electronics Industry in Ireland
144(21)
Frances Ruane
Holger Gorg
Foreign Direct Investment and International Fragmentation of Production
165(22)
Leonard K. Cheng
Larry D. Qiu
Guofu Tan
Will Italy Survive Globalization?
187(22)
Alberto Petrucci
Beniamino Quintieri
International Subcontracting in the Textile and Clothing Industry
209(22)
Giovanni Graziani
Joining the Global Economy: Experience and Prospects of the Transition Economies
231(24)
Henryk Kierzkowski
Index 255

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