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Spiders and snakes: Offshoring and agglomeration in the global economy
Institution:1. Graduate Institute, Geneva, Switzerland;2. University of Oxford, UK;3. CEPR, UK;1. University of Bayreuth, Department of Law and Economics, Universitätsstr. 30, 95447 Bayreuth, Germany;2. TU Dresden, Faculty of Business and Economics, Helmholtzstr. 10, 01069 Dresden, Germany;3. University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf Institute for Competition Economics (DICE), Universitätsstr. 1, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany;1. IDE-JETRO, JCN 3-2-2 Wakaba, Mihama-ku, Chiba-shi, Chiba, 261-8545, Japan;2. King''s College London, Political Economy and IDI, Strand Campus, London, United Kingdom;1. Economic Research and Statistics Division, World Trade Organization, Rue de Lausanne 154, Geneva 1202, Switzerland;2. Robert Schuman Centre of Advanced Studies, European University Institute, Villa Schifanoia, Via Boccaccio 121, Florence 50133, Italy;3. CEPR, Great Sutton Street 33, London EC1V 0DX, UK;1. Erasmus School of Economics (ESE), Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands;2. Tinbergen Institute, The Netherlands;3. University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Abstract:Global production sharing is determined by international cost differences and frictions related to the costs of unbundling stages spatially. The interaction between these forces depends on engineering details of the production process with two extremes being ‘snakes’ and ‘spiders’. Snakes are processes whose sequencing is dictated by engineering; spiders involve the assembly of parts in no particular order. This paper studies spatial unbundling as frictions fall, showing that outcomes are very different for snakes and spiders, even if they share some features. Both snakes and spiders have in common a property that lower frictions produce discontinuous location changes and ‘overshooting’. Parts may move against their comparative costs because of proximity benefits, and further reductions in frictions lead these parts to be ‘reshored’. Predictions for trade volumes and the number of fragmented stages are quite different in the two cases. For spiders, a part crosses borders at most twice; the value of trade increases monotonically as frictions fall, except when the assembler relocates and the direction of parts trade is reversed. For snakes the volume of trade and number of endogenously determined stages is bounded only by the fragmentation of the underlying engineering process, and lower frictions monotonically increase trade volumes.
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