Imports and Productivity: The Impact of Geography and Factor Intensity

Publication date

2017

Authors

van den Berg, M.
van Marrewijk, J.G.M.ISNI 0000000117730470

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Usingmicro-data for Dutch firms, we argue that both the geographic component (what country is the import from) and the intensity component (what type of good is imported) is crucial for measuring and understanding productivity premia associated with importing. For example, our results indicate that the productivity premium associated with importing technology-intensive products from Taiwan differs from importing unskilled-labor-intensive products from Switzerland. We show that increasing distance and decreasing levels of development of the origin economy are negatively associated with the productivity premia of importing. Similarly, these premia are larger for technology- intensive goods and smaller for unskilled-labor-intensive goods. This implies that the geographic-intensity markets are unique and cannot be lumped together. In addition, a more dispersed import portfolio (the extensive dimension) is always positively associated with firm-level productivity

Keywords

firm heterogeneity, imports, productivity, GEOGRAPHY, factor intensity, Taverne, SCI and SSCI Journals

Citation

van den Berg, M & van Marrewijk, J G M 2017, 'Imports and Productivity : The Impact of Geography and Factor Intensity', Journal of International Trade and Economic Development, vol. 26, no. 4, pp. 425-450. https://doi.org/10.1080/09638199.2016.1263359