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Lecture 22 Outsourcing and Offshoring

Lecture 22 Outsourcing and Offshoring. Econ 340. News: April 7-13. World's biggest cement companies, Swiss and French, to merge -- WSJ: 4/7 | Proquest | NYT: 4/7 | Proquest | FT: 4/7 | CTools

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Lecture 22 Outsourcing and Offshoring

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  1. Lecture 22 Outsourcing and Offshoring Econ 340

  2. News: April 7-13 • World's biggest cement companies, Swiss and French, to merge -- WSJ: 4/7 | Proquest | NYT: 4/7 | Proquest | FT: 4/7 | CTools • The French firm Lafarge and the Swiss firm Holcim, construction-materials companies that are the two largest producers of cement, announced their agreement to merge. The combined firm, to be called LafargeHolcim, would be based in Switzerland with operating headquarters in both countries. • Merger will need to be approved by as many as 15 different anti-trust regulators. To satisfy regulators, firms will sell assets especially in Europe, where without that their combined sales would exceed 40% of the market. They announced plans to sell assets that produce about $6.9 billion per year in revenue. • The European Commission has been investigating these companies plus six more since 2010 for operating as a cartel. • China's trade fell in March -- WSJ: 4/10 | Proquest | NYT: 4/10 | Proquest | FT: 4/10 | CTools • China's exports fell 6.6% in March and its imports fell 11.3%, year-on-year. This was unexpected and has caused concerns about China's prospects for growth. But Premier Li Keqiang said that China will not resort of short-term stimulus measures. • The export figure may be distorted, however, by over-invoicing of exports that occured in early 2013, in order to bypass capital controls. The Chinese government has cracked down on the practice since then, and has also let the currency fall, reducing the incentive for doing it. Since over-invoicing was most likely on exports to Hong Kong and Taiwan, and since exports to countries other than those rose 7%, over-invoicing does seem a likely cause of the new data. • China's trade surplus was $7.7 billion in March, after an unusual deficit in February. • US warns China about currency depreciation -- WSJ: 4/7 | Proquest | FT: 4/7 | CTools • An official of the US Treasury Department said the US is looking closely at China's actions in its currency market and that it would "raise serious concerns" if China moves away from allowing market forces to determine its exchange rate. • This happens after China widened its band of exchange rate fluctuation and the currency then fell in value. In spite of the wider band, analysts see the depreciation as engineered by China's central bank, not so much to stimulate its economy but to punish exchange rate speculation. • The announcement came just before last week's meeting of the IMF, World Bank, and G20 in Washington, perhaps to deflect attention from criticism of US monetary policy, which through quantitative easing had pushed capital toward emerging markets, and now through tapering of that policy is causing capital to flow back out. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  3. News: April 7-13 • World's biggest cement companies, Swiss and French, to merge • The French firm Lafarge and the Swiss firm Holcim, construction-materials companies that are the two largest producers of cement, announced their agreement to merge. The combined firm, to be called LafargeHolcim, would be based in Switzerland with operating headquarters in both countries. • Merger will need to be approved by as many as 15 different anti-trust regulators. To satisfy regulators, firms will sell assets especially in Europe, where without that their combined sales would exceed 40% of the market. They announced plans to sell assets that produce about $6.9 billion per year in revenue. • The European Commission has been investigating these companies plus six more since 2010 for operating as a cartel. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  4. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  5. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  6. News: April 7-13 • China's trade fell in March • China's exports fell 6.6% in March and its imports fell 11.3%, year-on-year. This was unexpected and has caused concerns about China's prospects for growth. But Premier Li Keqiang said that China will not resort of short-term stimulus measures. • The export figure may be distorted, however, by over-invoicing of exports that occurred in early 2013, in order to bypass capital controls. The Chinese government has cracked down on the practice since then, and has also let the currency fall, reducing the incentive for doing it. Since over-invoicing was most likely on exports to Hong Kong and Taiwan, and since exports to countries other than those rose 7%, over-invoicing does seem a likely cause of the new data. • China's trade surplus was $7.7 billion in March, after an unusual deficit in February. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  7. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  8. News: April 7-13 • US warns China about currency depreciation • An official of the US Treasury Department said the US is looking closely at China's actions in its currency market and that it would "raise serious concerns" if China moves away from allowing market forces to determine its exchange rate. • This happens after China widened its band of exchange rate fluctuation and the currency then fell in value. In spite of the wider band, analysts see the depreciation as engineered by China's central bank, not so much to stimulate its economy but to punish exchange rate speculation. • The announcement came just before last week's meeting of the IMF, World Bank, and G20 in Washington, perhaps to deflect attention from criticism of US monetary policy, which through quantitative easing had pushed capital toward emerging markets, and now through tapering of that policy is causing capital to flow back out. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  9. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  10. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  11. Announcements • Exam 2: • You already saw that I re-graded the MC and your scores changed • I’ve now found another error (questions 6 and 7 were reversed on Forms 1 and 3). So grades will change again. • Course evaluations • Bring laptop to last class, Mon Apr 21. • I’ll leave time at the end of class for you to fill out your evaluation if you haven’t already. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  12. Announcements • Next class, visit by John Sweetland • UM alum, donor of • Sweetland Writing Center • Sweetland Chair of International Economics • Made his fortune in several businesses: • International trade of cement • Hotel equipment Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  13. Sweetland • NYT, 4/7/14: • “Cement’s economics — it has a relatively low value and is expensive to transport — mean that long-distance exports are usually not profitable. So European producers do not have to compete with imports from lower-cost producers in places like Asia.” Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  14. Sweetland Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  15. Outline: Outsourcing and Offshoring • Definitions of OS • Causes of OS • Effects of OS • Facts about OS • Policies Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  16. Definitions • Outsourcing = Movement of an activity to outside of firm (Not necessarily outside country) • Offshoring = Movement of an activity to outside of country (Not necessarily outside firm) • Could be • Subsidiary abroad (FDI) • Subcontracting with another firm • Arm’s-length trade • Often refers to services • Sometimes called “trade in tasks” Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  17. Definitions • Both could be called: OS = OutSourcing / OffShoring • I’ll use “OS” to refer to OffShoring, since that’s the one that is clearly international Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  18. Outline: Outsourcing and Offshoring • Definitions of OS • Causes of OS • Effects of OS • Facts about OS • Policies Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  19. Causes of OS • Blinder identifies two causes of the recent increase in OS: • New technologies • Information • Communication • Entry of new populations into world economy • China • India • Former Soviet states • These make OS possible for jobs that can be done at a distance Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  20. Causes of OS • Otherwise, causes of OS are same as causes of other trade • Activities are offshored if they can be done more cheaply elsewhere • Thus OS occurs due to • Comparative Advantage • Due to technology differences • Due to factor-endowment differences • Economies of Scale Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  21. Outline: Outsourcing and Offshoring • Definitions of OS • Causes of OS • Effects of OS • Facts about OS • Policies Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  22. Effects of OS • Disagreements • Bivens(not assigned), like other trade skeptics, • is largely negative • He defines offshoring as “substituting foreign for domestic labor” • Many mainstream trade economists • see offshoring as ordinary trade • are largely positive • Blinder (a very well-respected macro economist) • sees it as beneficial overall • but worries about effects on US labor Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  23. Effects of OS • Effects that are Like trade: • All of the effects of trade that we have studied, are valid for this. OS istrade. • Thus • Countries as a whole gain, due to comparative advantage, economies of scale, etc. • Some people within the countries lose – especially those whose jobs are lost • Theory says that “scarce factors” are hurt by trade, and thus also by outsourcing. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  24. Effects of OS • Effects that are Unlike trade • i.e., effects that don’t occur with other trade, or at least weren’t mentioned • Increased insecurity: workers feel more threatened • New groups (white collar, in high-income countries) are seeing the threat • Employers can “move jobs”; workers can’t • Thus employers gain in bargaining over wages Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  25. Effects of OS • Effects that are Unlike trade • (Possible) loss of technological advantage • Poor countries acquire the knowledge that rich countries previously had exclusively. • Thus • Poor countries become more productive • Their incomes rise • Therefore OS helps economic development Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  26. Effects of OS • Effects that are Unlike trade • (Possible) loss of technological advantage • Terms of trade of rich countries worsen, costing them some of their gains from trade • Thus rich countries may lose from the loss of exclusive technologies due to OS • But what they are losing are the gains from trade. Refusing to trade would only make things worse. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  27. Effects of OS • OS from US may create jobs inUS • OS can make a firm or industry viable that would not have been viable without OS • Example: US software company, IMC. (IMC = Information Management Consultants. Makes software to exploit human genome research.) • Became viable only with coding done in India. • Now it employs six engineers in the US for every one in India. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  28. Effects of OS • OS raises productivity (see Amiti and Wei) • They estimated the causes of US productivity growth over 1992-2000 • 11% of it was due to “service offshoring” • Only 3-6% was due to imported material inputs • Why? Because firms choose to offshore the less efficient parts of what they do. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  29. Effects of OS • OS threatens some occupations more than others (see Blinder’s examples) Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  30. Outline: Outsourcing and Offshoring • Definitions of OS • Causes of OS • Effects of OS • Facts about OS • Policies Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  31. Facts about OS • Blinder estimates that 30-40 million US jobs are potentially offshorable. • Compare to civilian employment in Jun 2008: 145.9 million • So Blinder is estimating that up to a quarter of US employment is potentially threatened by offshoring • Thus it “rattles” him Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  32. Facts about OS • But the actual amount is still relatively small • Brainardand Litansay OS accounts for only 2% of those who involuntarily lose their jobs. (It would be a much smaller share of all job turnover) Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  33. Facts about OS • OS is moving into services • There are flows in both directions • Flows out of US are mostly low valuejobs • So far. But Blinder worries & sees threats to higher value jobs Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  34. Facts about OS • Brainard and Litan say OS is not shifting the proportion of incomes more towards profits • See graph below Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  35. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  36. Facts about OS • Brainard and Litan say OS is notshifting the proportion of incomes more towards profits • See graph below • Other data (below) show that labor’s share • Has declined in recent decades • Increased in the crisis, as profits fell • Then fell most recently in the recovery Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  37. Source: Economic Report of the President 2013 Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  38. [New Slide] Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  39. Facts about OS • Compared to 1960’s • Wage share is down • Compensation share is down less, though it was higher in the 1970s and 80s • (Includes fringe benefits, such as health care) Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  40. Facts about OS • Wages and employment have recently stagnated, according to Bivens at Economic Policy Institute (not assigned) Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  41. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  42. Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  43. Facts about OS • Wages and employment have recently stagnated, according to Bivens at Economic Policy Institute • This may not be due to OS • But people naturally think that it is Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  44. Facts about OS • One explanation (see Mandel): Phantom GDP • Puzzle: Why has US productivity risen, but wages have not? • Possible Answer: OS • Raises measured GDP more than actual output or • Lowers measured GDP less than actual output Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  45. Facts about OS • Examples of Phantom GDP • Switch from expensive imported inputs to cheaper imported inputs: • M falls, so Y=C+I+G+X−M rises • But our actual output didn’t change • Switch from expensive domestic inputs to cheaper imported inputs • M rises, and Y falls, but by less than actual output fell Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  46. Facts about OS • Implication of Phantom GDP • GDP • Overstates actual output • Thus overstates productivity • Does this mean that OS is hurting us? • No! • It means that gains from trade are being misinterpreted as increased productivity Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  47. Tom Friedman’s View of OS • Tom Friedman (author of The World Is Flat) • CEOs no longer think of outsourcing (or offshoring) because • They don’t think of “in” or “out” • Things are “Made in the World” • They produce “anywhere through global supply chains “ Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  48. Tom Friedman’s View of OS • Friedman thinks the US has advantages that will let us prosper in this new world: • protection for intellectual property • secure capital markets • government funding for science • strength in logistics (FedEx, UPS) Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  49. Facts about OS • Recently, some offshoring has been reversing(see Economist): • Some companies are bringing operations back to the US • Called “reshoring” Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

  50. Facts about OS • Examples of reshoring • General Electric has “returned production of fridges, washing machines and heaters from China back to Kentucky.” • Lenovo is starting to make PCs in North Carolina • GM is shifting its IT back to Detroit • Apple is making some Macs in the US Econ 340, Deardorff, Lecture 22: Outsourcing & Offshoring

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