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Does Outsourcing to Central and Eastern Europe really threaten manual workers’ jobs in Germany? Ingo Geishecker Juni 2005
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Outline Stylised facts: Skill upgrading in manufacturing International Outsourcing The literature The econometric model Estimation
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Motivation: Wage and employment trends Unskilled worker‘s employment Germany: continued rise in unemployment of low-skilled workers skill upgrading of employment Unskilled workers‘ earnings relative wages close to stable
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Unskilled employment
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1975 2000 1980198519901995 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% no Training Average Vocational Training University/Technical College Unskilled unemployment Source: IAB calculations
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Shift-share analysis change in cost share of low-skilled labour in total wage bill decomposed into change in relative wages and change in relative employment: - 23%-pts = - 2%-pts - 21%-pts confirms Literature on stable relative wages and relative fall in low-skill employment
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Shift-share analysis change in employment share of low-skilled labour decomposed into within-industry and cross-industry skill upgrading: - 3.2 %-pts = - 3.9 %-pts + 0.7 %-pts summarising: skill upgrading occurs within and not across industries under nearly constant relative wages Question: What drives skill upgrading?
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Theory of outsourcing and labour demand General equilibrium models Feenstra Hanson (1996) Jones and Kierzkowski (2001) Arndt (1999) Kohler (2003) How outsourcing effects demand for low-skilled labour in general equilibrium is not clear. Empirical question. But first can we even find effects of outsourcing in partial equilibrium?
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Empirics of fragmentation and wages industry level studies: Feenstra and Hanson (1996), Morrison-Paul and Siegel (2001) and others: composite demand equation for low-skilled labour, outsourcing is shift parameter problem: aggregation bias, endogeneity bias, measurement Falk and Koebel (2002): use relative prices and no shift parameter problem: outsourcing only captured by relative price changes micro level studies: Geishecker, Görg (2004) on outsourcing and wages
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International Outsourcing Use trade data, allocate imports to domestic industries by utilising input- output data wide definition: all imported inputs of an industry i narrow definition: international Outsourcing is outcome of a “make or buy” decision, hence only imported inputs from the same industry i abroad are relevant
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International Outsourcing by region Differentiate import data by geographic region (as in Anderton and Brenton, 1999), allocate to industries holding use coefficient constant wide definition: narrow definition:
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Narrow Outsourcing by geographic region Source: OECD commodity trade data, Statistisches Bundesamt Input-Output Tables, authors calculations
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Wide Outsourcing by geographic region Source: OECD commodity trade data, Statistisches Bundesamt Input-Output Tables, authors calculations
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Empirical Model Potential endogeneity of relative Wage and Outsourcing GMM using one and two year lagged values GMM is consistent but not efficient therefore endogeneity tests first
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Empirical Model
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Results
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Simulations
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Summary substantial within industry skill upgrading nearly constant relative wages in the narrow outsourcing model the predicted overall decline in manual workers wage bill share is 4.7 %-pts of this, increasing outsourcing can explain 2.7 %-pts technological progress can explain almost 3 %-pts with nearly constant relative wages, decline in relative demand has to be met by reductions in relative employment Therefore: manual workers jobs are indeed threatened by outsourcing towards CEC
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Source: OECD, Statistical Office Germany Prices for intermediate imports
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International Outsourcing Z* CSCS CNCN C´ S Z´ C N,S =f(w HS, w LS, r, A) skill intensity unit costs Feenstra and Hanson (1996)
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Narrow outsourcing by industry
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Wide outsourcing by industry
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