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Trade, multinational sales, and FDI in a three-factors model

Peter Egger and Michael Pfaffermayr

No 2000-13, Economics working papers from Department of Economics, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria

Abstract: The overwhelming importance of multinational activities as well as the coexistence of exporters and multinationals within the developed countries demand for theoretical models which provide a convincing explanation of simultaneous two-way trade and horizontal multinational activities. We present a model with three factors of production to disentangle the twofold importance of headquarters for their affiliates into a know-how and a capital serving part (FDI). Multinationals trade-off the incentives for a high proximity to the market and a concentraion of production facilities. We simulate the model to derive predictions about the impact of trade costs, plant set-up costs, relative country size and factor endowments on the factor prices of labor, human and physical capital on the one hand and three main output variables, exports, multination sales and FDI, on the other. We find that the effects are not uniform for multinational sales and FDI. Hence, one shuld be careful with interpreting the simulation results of previous work for sales as simply holding for FDI as well.

Keywords: multinationals; new trade theory; endogenous location (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F12 F13 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2000-06
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (12)

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Journal Article: Trade, Multinational Sales, and FDI in a Three‐factor Model (2005) Downloads
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