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Globalization indicators The Import Content Of Export. The case of the Netherlands. Marjolijn Jaarsma Statistics Netherlands April 27th 2004. Agenda. Globalization Definitions, causes and characteristics OECD introduction ‘globalization’ indicators
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Globalization indicatorsThe Import Content Of Export The case of the Netherlands Marjolijn Jaarsma Statistics Netherlands April 27th 2004
Agenda • Globalization • Definitions, causes and characteristics • OECD introduction ‘globalization’ indicators • Monitoring globalization with new indicator • Import content of export • Internationalization of production processes • Problems in case of the Netherlands • Re-exports • New model
Economic globalization • New phase in international economic transactions, characterized by increasing economic interaction and integration among countries • Trade in goods and services increasingly matched by international investment and multinational activity • International framework has changed • Standard (trade) indicators become less telling • New indicators needed, capable of looking beyond surface FT and FDI
How to ‘capture’ globalization • Globalization indicator(s) developed by OECD • Focused on internationalization of production processes rather than international trade and investment • ‘Import Content Of Export’ • The necessity to import in order to be able to export • Fraction import in an average unit of export • Relative integration with and dependence on foreign production • A high import content of export not necessarily bad
Internationalization of production • Analysis of (internationalization of) production processes Input-output tables (Netherlands) • Supply consists of intermediate deliveries and deliveries to final demand (e + r) • Use consists of intermediate deliveries, import and primary inputs • Total Uses input-output tables OECD Olisnet (40*40 sectors) f Intermediate deliveries e r m
Input-output analysis (1) • Sector output depends on final demand and intermediate demand (which depends on...) • Output cycle • How much output must each sector produce? • : total amount of final demand • : unity matrix • : matrix of technical coefficients • Amount of output each sector needs to produce in order to satisfy final and intermediate demand Leontieff inverse
Input-output analysis (2) • Also imports needed to satisfy intermediate and final demand • Matrix MC resembles matrix A • Ratio of import flow to sector output • Vector x: Amount of Dutch output • Adjusted Leontieff inverse excludes imports • Leontieff inverse essential in OECD indicator
Import content of export • ‘Manual of economic globalization indicators’ • Import Content of Export indicator • : share of import per sector of sector output • : Leontieff inverse (adjusted!) • : share of export per sector in total sectoral export • Yields a single figure for whole economy • Requires the use of Total Uses input-output tables and Import Flows tables (OECD Olisnet)
Import content of Dutch exports • ICOE risen from 33.6% in 1995 to 34.7% in 1997 • Decline also found in FT – picked up after 1998
Problems • Differences classification • FT data: commodity flows • Input-output tables: economic activity • Re-exports • Focusing on m and e/E yields structurally lower ICOE • Important activity for Netherlands • Extracted from trade data and represented separately • Re-exports not reported separately for many other OECD countries; somehow assigned to sectoral exports • Different interpretation ICOE indicator between countries • Indicator might not be ready for cross-country comparison
New model – Adjusted ICOE • Original indicator • : Sum of all intermediate import flows entering sectors of production (as a share of output) • Leaves out re-exports in m and E • Expand composition vector m to include re-exports • Matrix of intermediate import flows (MC) • Matrix of re-exports, as a share of sectoral export • Further manipulations • Import content of export; subdivided for each intermediate delivery !
ICOE • Input-output tables 40*40 9*9
Import content of export per delivery • To deliver 1 unit of export, sector j needs intermediate deliveries from sector i, which consist for x% of imports • Intermediate deliveries sector 5 (ICT) receives from sector 5, consist for 67.86% of imports • Useful for detailed analysis of internationalization production
Adjusted ICOE • Objective indicator • Monitoring globalization (1 figure) cross-country • Import content Dutch exports • Whole economy, including re-exports
Conclusion • Initial indicator overlooks part of Dutch trade • Adjusted calculations lead to higher import content of Dutch exports • On aggregate basis, cross-country comparison possible • Disaggregated suitable for in depth analysis • The fraction imports in an average export unit approximately 40% • Further questions mjra@cbs.nl