A New International Division of Labor in Europe: Outsourcing and Offshoring to Eastern Europe
- 1 September 2005
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
Europe is reorganizing its international value chain. I document these changes in Europe's international organization of production with new survey data of Austrian and German firms investing in Eastern Europe. I show estimates of the share of intrafirm trade between Austria or Germany on the one hand and Eastern Europe on the other. Furthermore, I present empirical evidence of the drivers of the new division of labor in Europe. I find among other things that falling trade costs and reduced levels of corruption as well as improvements in the contracting environment in Eastern Europe are affecting the level of intrafirm imports from that region. These factors also favor outsourcing over offshoring. In contrast, low organizational costs of hierarchies and large costs of holdup (when there are no alternative investors in Old Europe or no alternative suppliers in Eastern Europe) favor offshoring over outsourcing. Tax holidays granted by host countries in Eastern Europe also mildly affect the organizational choice.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Corporate hierarchies and international trade: Theory and evidenceJournal of International Economics, 2014
- Contracts and the Division of LaborPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2005
- Global SourcingJournal of Political Economy, 2004
- A Nation of Poets and Thinkers - Less so with Eastern Enlargement? Austria and GermanySSRN Electronic Journal, 2004
- Firms, Contracts, and Trade StructureThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2003
- Globalization and the Empowerment of TalentSSRN Electronic Journal, 2003
- Ownership, Capital or Outsourcing: What Drives German Investment to Eastern Europe?Published by Springer Nature ,2003
- Contracts in Trade and TransitionPublished by MIT Press ,2002
- Expansion Strategies of U.S. Multinational FirmsPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2001
- The nature and growth of vertical specialization in world tradeJournal of International Economics, 2001