Offshoring, domestic outsourcing and productivity: evidence for a number of European countries
Tillmann Schwörer ()
Review of World Economics (Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv), 2013, vol. 149, issue 1, 149 pages
Abstract:
The growth in offshoring and its economic effects have been subject to extensive empirical analysis. Yet, many studies have not distinguished accurately between offshoring, domestic outsourcing, and supplier changes. The present study provides stylized facts on offshoring in Europe between 1995 and 2008 taking into account this distinction. This study shows that service activities have been systematically offshored and outsourced domestically during this period, whereas manufacturing activities have been systematically offshored or moved from domestic to foreign suppliers. Overall the share of internal production has gone down by 4.5 percentage points, which raises the question whether firms have achieved productivity gains through this specialisation effort. Combining industry-level data on offshoring and domestic outsourcing with a firm panel, this study finds that service offshoring and offshoring of non-core manufacturing activities have contributed to an increase in productivity, whereas no statistically significant link is found for offshoring of core manufacturing activities and domestic outsourcing. The estimated productivity gains are found to be driven in particular by the gains of multinational firms. Copyright Kiel Institute 2013
Keywords: Offshoring; Domestic outsourcing; Productivity; F23; D24; L24; L60 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013
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DOI: 10.1007/s10290-012-0139-9
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