1 Exports and Productivity Link in Manufacturing: Microeconomic Evidence from Croatia Gorana Lukinić Čardić Dubrovnik, June 23, 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 The contribution of foreign affiliates to productivity growth: evidence from OECD countries Chiara Criscuolo Economic Analysis and Statistics Division.
Advertisements

Bank Efficiency and Market Structure: What Determines Banking Spreads in Armenia? Era Dabla Norris and Holger Floerkemeier.
Yvonne Wolfmayr with Martin Falk Services and materials outsourcing to low-wage countries and employment: Empirical evidence from EU countries WORKS Expert.
Income and Price Elasticities of Croatian Trade: A Panel Data Approach Vida Bobić.
Belarus: public sector development Dmitry Kolkin Advisor to the Minister of Economy.
SMEs: Improving Growth and Containing Unemployment Munther Sharé President of Jordan’s Economic & Social Council JLGC - SME Conference November 24, 2014.
1 Productivity and Growth Chapter 21 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Industrial transition model Case Slovakia Jaroslav Vokoun Bulgaria, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia – Comparison of industrial transition models Sofia,
Firms in International Trade Ana Carolina Gama Fatoumata Diallo Mohamed Kabakibi TD – Commerce International.
Does FDI Harm the Host Country’s Environment? Evidence from Coastal and Interior China Helen Feng Liang University of California, Berkeley April 12, 2006.
SMEs’ Finance and Participation in Global Markets Koji ITO Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs and Local Development (CFE) Organisation for Economic.
Annual Meeting of the Canadian Economics Association Laval University Quebec, Quebec Saturday, May 29, 2010 Productivity Performance and Government Policy.
1 J. de Loecker Do Exports Generate Higher Productivity? Evidence from Slovenia (Journal of Int’l Economics, Sep. 2007) presented by Yunrong Li.
THE EFFECTS OF PUBLIC SECTOR INVESTMENTS ON ECONOMIC GROWTH OF CROATIA Saša Drezgić, PhD University of Rijeka Faculty of Economics 14 th Dubrovnik Economic.
What questions would you like to ask?. From which country does the UK import the most services? (1) Germany To which country does the UK export the most.
FRANCISCO VELOSO 1 PEDRO CONCEIÇÃO 2 1 Faculdade de Ciências Económicas e Empresariais Universidade Católica Portuguesa 2 Center for Innovation, Technology.
“Exports and Productivity Link in Manufacturing: Microeconomic Evidence from Croatia” by Gorana Lukinic Cardic YES, DEK Comments by John Earle June 2010.
Factors Influencing Founder-CEO Succession: the Examples of CIS and CEE Countries Galina V. Shirokova - Ph.D., Associate Professor Alexander Shatalov,
INNOVATION AND ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE: AN ANALYSIS AT THE FIRM LEVEL IN LUXEMBOURG Vincent Dautel CEPS/INSTEAD Seminar “Firm Level innovation and the CIS.
Bank of Israel Annual Report April was a good year for Israel's economy: The economy grew rapidly, with growth led by the business sector.
14/04/11 Relaxing Credit Constraints: The Impact of Public Loans on the Performance of Brazilian Firms IDEAS International Assembly 2011 * Corresponding.
Carmela Pascucci – Istat - Italy Meeting of the Working Party on International Trade in Goods and Trade in Services Statistics (WPTGS) Linking business.
The determinants of foreign investment in Russian food industry companies Draft of the paper Student: Gladysheva Anna Group: 41MMAE Argument consultant:
1 MICROECONOMIC REFORM VCE ECONOMICS. 2 Microeconomic reform refers to government policies which aim to improve the individual sectors of the markets.
Changing Engines of Growth in China: From FDI and Privatization to Innovation and Knowledge Furong Jin, Keun Lee, and Yee-Kyoung Kim Dep’t of Economics,
Slide Eastern Finance Association Annual Meeting 2009Andreas Dietrich SME Credit Availability Around the World: Evidence from the World Bank’s Enterprise.
Distance and Home-market Effect: Japanese Local Port Trade with the Asia Region Yushi Yoshida Faculty of Economics Kyushu Sangyo University.
What do we know about South African exporters from micro-data? Neil Rankin July 2009 African Micro-Economic Research Umbrella School of Economic and Business.
Federal Planning Bureau Economic analyses and forecasts 1 An assessment of Belgian NRP macroeconomic objectives in a medium term framework Francis Bossier.
Laura Hospido Eva Moreno Galbis CEPREMAP Productivity Project 23rd January 2015 Conference The opinions and analyses are the responsibility of the authors.
ICT, Corporate Restructuring and Productivity Laura Abramovsky Rachel Griffith IFS and UCL ZEW – November 2007 Workshop on Innovative Capabilities and.
THE IMPACTS OF THE EU SUBSIDIES ON THE PRODUCTION OF ORGANIC FARMS Marie Pechrová Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Faculty of Ecoomics and Management.
Mergers, Acquisitions and Export Competitiveness: Experience of Indian Manufacturing Sector Researcher: Mishra Pulak, Jaiswal Neha Publishing Year: 2012.
Alternative Economic Policies in Europe Pavia Conference 24th – 25th April 2015.
Linking micro data for the analysis of ICT effects Mika Maliranta, ETLA Istat – Stat Fin Workshop, June 26th and 27th, Rome.
Assessment of Balassa-Samuelson Effect in Croatia Gorana Lukinić, Igor Ljubaj and Josip Funda.
Project funded by the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Programme, Grant No Do Intangibles Enhance Productivity Growth?
Migration and Firms’ Growth: evidence from Spanish cities Mercedes Teruel-Carrizosa Agustí Segarra-Blasco (very preliminary version) Grup de Recerca d’Indústria.
MOVING EUROPE’S PRODUCTIVITY FRONTIER: The Role of Human Capital Karl PICHELMANN “Quality of Tertiary Education and the Economic Policy Agenda” Ljubljana,
Lecture 1: Trade and Labour H. Vandenbussche. Research questions Link between imports from low-wage countries and firm-level employment growth? Link between.
Competition and Inflation in CESEE: A Sectoral Analysis * Reiner Martin (ECB) Julia Wörz (OeNB) Dubrovnik, June 2011 *All views expressed are those of.
THE IMPACT OF INTERNATIONAL OUTSOURCING ON EMPLOYMENT: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM EU COUNTRIES Martin Falk and Yvonne Wolfmayr Austrian Institute of Economic.
Employment and Unemployment in the Recent Recession: Some German Institutions Revisited ICRIER Workshop New York University’s Stern School of Business.
Export Spillovers from FDI: Evidence from Polish firm-level data Andrzej Cieślik (University of Warsaw) Jan Hagemejer (National Bank of Poland)
Offshoring and Productivity: A Micro-data Analysis Jianmin Tang and Henrique do Livramento Presentation to The 2008 World Congress on National Accounts.
P.Aghion, T.Fally, S.Scarpetta Conference on Access to Finance, Wordlbank, March 15-16, Financial Constraints, Entry and Post-Entry Growth.
Transformation – results © Libor Žídek. Economic growth in Czechoslovakia , and trend line.
INSTITUTES OF INNOVATIVE DEVELOPMENT: THEIR ROLE IN REGIONAL CLUSTERS Anna Bykova PhD student, Higher School of Economics Russia 23th September 2011 Milocer,
Road to prosperity. Cathing-up ▪ The Finnish GDP per person grew 21-fold ▪ A growth of 2,2 percent per annum ▪ In the 15 EU-countries, the.
Impact of the inter-firm cooperation on company's performance: major changes during the economic crisis November 27, 2013 Oksana Kabakova.
Export and Productivity of Chinese Manufacturing Firms LU Jiangyong October 14, at CEFIR.
INNOVATION AND PRODUCTIVITY: A Firm Level Study of Ukrainian Manufacturing Sector Tetyana Pavlenko and Ganna Vakhitova Kyiv School of Economics Kyiv Economic.
Employment, skill structure and international trade: firm- level evidence for France Pierre Biscourp – Francis Kramarz (2007)
Innovation and Productivity – Evidence from China Jingying Xu, Prof. Andreas Waldkirch Department of Economics ABSTRACT BACKGROUND STRATEGIES CONCLUSION.
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT, OPENNESS AND EXPORT PROMOTION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA By Nyambati R. Aori Paper to be presented at Center for the Study of African.
Milan, February 2014 IER Determinants of Firm Performance and Growth during Economic Recession: The Case of Central and Eastern European Countries.
1 R&D ACTIVITIES AS A GROWTH FACTOR OF FOREIGN OWNED SMEs IN CROATIA Zoran Aralica Domagoj Račić
Changing Engines of Growth in China: From FDI and Privatization to Innovation and Knowledge Furong JIN, Keun LEE, and Yee-Kyoung KIM Dep’t of Economics,
Economic Impact of the Portuguese Mutual Guarantee Scheme
SYMPOSIUM | Greece, Out of The Crisis: Debt-End or Dead-End
Microeconomics of Growth: Case of Morocco
The Employment Challenge in MENA: Unemployment high and rising
Seyed Mehrshad Parvin Hosseini School of Social Sciences
World economy and international markets Presentation
Presentation at the African Economic Conference
The Productivity Effects of Privatization Longitudinal Estimates using Comprehensive Manufacturing Firm Data from Hungary, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine.
Steven Fries Deputy Chief Economist
5/5/2019 Financial dependence and industry growth in Europe: Better banks and higher productivity Robert Inklaar and Michael Koetter University of Groningen.
Productivity Strategy
Technological innovations and labour demand in SMEs in Europe
Presentation transcript:

1 Exports and Productivity Link in Manufacturing: Microeconomic Evidence from Croatia Gorana Lukinić Čardić Dubrovnik, June 23, 2010

2 Outline  Introduction  Croatian exports: macroeconomic view  Structural features of Croatian exporters  Methodology  Results  Conclusion

3 Introduction  "Productivity isn't everything, but in the long run it is almost everything. A country’s ability to improve its standard of living over time depends almost entirely on its ability to raise its output per worker.“ Paul Krugman  Croatian economy characterized by macroeconomic stability but deteriorating external position  Paper presents microeconomic data on Croatian exports, focusing on the link between productivity and exports  Significant evidence on exporter premium: exporters are on average larger, more productive, pay higher wages, etc.  Self-selection vs. learning-by-exporting hypothesis

4 Low competitiveness of Croatian merchandise exports Annual growth rate of exports (%) Exports per capita (EUR) Source: Eurostat

5 Factors behindweak results  lack of investment in the creation of advanced products, low level of competition in innovation and investment in R&D, the lack of more “demanding” domestic market (Mikić, 2002)  slow implementation of reforms, bureaucratic obstacles, problems with the judiciary, unregulated land registry (Teodorovic and Buturac, 2006)  delay in the process of Croatian accession to the EU (Škuflić, 2005)  ….

6 Who exports in Croatia? (i) Exporter participation rate and export intensity Source: own calculations based on FINA database Exporter participation rate is the ratio between the number of exporters and the total number of enterprises. Export intensity is the average share of exports in total sales of exporters.

7 Who exports in Croatia? (ii)  Majority of Croatian exporters are small firms – they accounted for almost 70 percent of exporters in 2007  But the bulk of total exports is realized by large firms that have the highest export intensity, which was on average around 40 percent  According to ownership structure, privately owned enterprises dominate  Most of the exporters (around 80 percent) belong to low and medium-low technology industries

8 Who exports in Croatia? (iii) Concentration indicators Source: own calculations based on FINA database

9 Transition matrix Values show percentages. N stands for non-exporter and E for exporter.

10 Estimation methodology  Exporter productivity premium: LP is labour productivity EDUM is a dummy variable for the exporter status CONTROL is a vector of control variables: dummy variables for each year and industry at the two-letter level, firm size (assets or dummy for firm size according to official classification)  OLS regression on panel data: without and with fixed effects

11 Estimation methodology (ii)  Self-selection hypothesis:  Learning-by-exporting hypothesis:

12 Results: exporter productivity premium All coefficients are statistically significant. Robustness checks: sample of firms with more than 20 employees; sample without small exporters; sample without occasional exporters

13 Results: self-selection hypothesis No coefficient is statistically significant. The dependent variable is labour productivity defined as the ratio of sales and employment. Firm size is measured by their assets.

14 Results: learning-by-exporting hypothesis The dependent variable is labour productivity defined as the ratio of sales and employment. Firm size is measured by their assets.

15 Conclusion  Rich structure of exports is hidden behind aggregate data  Exports are more concentrated than sales and employments: within-sector concentration in line with the new new trade theory  Robust estimates of exporter productivity premium  Ambiguous evidence on the self-selection and learning- by-exporting hypothesis  Many possibilities for improving the estimates and for further research

16 Thank you for your attention!