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Outsourcing, Offshoring and Adjustment in the Global Economy Presentation prepared for Munich Economic Summit, 4 May 2006 John Whalley (University of Western Ontario, CESifo & NBER). Outsourcing . Purchase of goods and services that were previously produced inside a company.
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Outsourcing, Offshoring and Adjustment in the Global EconomyPresentation prepared for Munich Economic Summit, 4May 2006John Whalley(University of Western Ontario, CESifo & NBER)
Outsourcing • Purchase of goods and services that were previously produced inside a company. • Company producing the goods and services can be located in the same country (domestic outsourcing) or outside the country of the purchasing company (international outsourcing). 5th Munich Economic Summit
Offshoring • Purchase of goods and services previously produced while inside the purchasing company from companies in locations outside the country. • Covers not only international outsourcing, but also international insourcing with foreign affiliates of domestic parent companies exporting to their parents. 5th Munich Economic Summit
Outsourcing in Research Literature Grossman – Helpman (2002) • Outsourcing implies more than purchase of raw materials and standardized intermediate inputs. It involves vertical disintegration of production with relationship-specific partners. • Outsourcing... “means finding a partner with which a firm can establish a bilateral relationship and having the partner undertake relationship specific investments so that it becomes able to produce goods and services that fit the firm’s particular needs” Bhagwati, Panagariya, Srinivasan (2004) • Outsourcing of services, including professional services. Outsourcing equated with long distance purchases of services by electronic media, such as phone and fax. 5th Munich Economic Summit
Measuring Outsourcing • Abraham & Taylor (1996) document increase in outsourcing of business services in 13 US industries. • Camper and Goldberg (1997) measure outsourcing of intermediate inputs for various industries in Canada, Japan, the UK, the US and except Japan show a doubling in the share of imported inputs between 1975 and 1996. • Feenstra (1998) measures all imported components used in production by US firms and computes various measures of outsourcing arguing all have increased since the 1970s. • Tomiura (2005) reports relatively few Japanese firms outsource across national boundaries. 5th Munich Economic Summit
Impacts of Outsourcing • Direct wage effects / employment effects in OECD as production moves offshore. • Indirect effects on bargaining power of unions in OECD from prospect of outsourcing. • Feenstra / Hanson (1996, 1997) find outsourcing increases wage of skilled versus unskilled labour in both US & Mexico. • Feenstra / Hanson (1999) find US outsourcing raises real wage of US non production workers by 0.16% / year and also real wage of US production workers (slightly) by 0.01% / year. • Dreher and Gaston (2005) report results indicating various measures of globalization are negatively correlated with both union bargaining power and union membership • Amiti / Wei (2006) find between 1992 and 2000 service outsourcing (technical support, medical claims processing, software development) account for around 11% of US manufacturing productivity growth, compared to a 3-6% gain from imported material inputs. 5th Munich Economic Summit
Outsourcing to China, Channels of Economic Integration, and Adjustment Pressures • Adjustment pressures stem not only from component sales, but also final stage transactions involving OECD retailers. A variety of channels for such transactions exist. • Resourcing of component and final stage suppliers across national borders. • Insourcing – Chinese companies buying OECD firms; keeping distribution system in OECD & moving production back to China. • Throughsourcing – Trade related transactions orchestrated and conducted via middlemen in Hong Kong (plus Korea, Taiwan) • Roundaboutsourcing – preferential tax and other policies towards foreign invested enterprises generate outflows from China to be returned to trade oriented enterprises. 5th Munich Economic Summit
OECD adjustments and Outsourcing • Current adjustments and potential future adjustments. • Size of low wage labour pool in China / India / Indonesia • FIEs in China now account for 60% of exports but only 3% of employment. • China’s exports growing at 35-40% / year • Cumulative OECD FDI into China ≈US$500 bill. • In OECD GDP ≈ $25 trillion. If K/Y ratio is 3, OECD capital stock ≈ $75 trillion. • Adjustments in OECD from outsourcing may be only in their infancy? 5th Munich Economic Summit