Cost relationships and challenges in the Spanish apparel industry |
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Authors: | Lila J. Truett Dale B. Truett |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Economics, The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78249-0633, USAlila.truett@utsa.edu;3. Department of Economics, The University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78249-0633, USA |
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Abstract: | In the twenty-first century, the Spanish textile and apparel industries have faced substantial challenges, resulting in declining sales and employment. This study concentrates on the apparel industry, since its economic challenges and opportunities differ from those of the textile industry. The analysis employs a transcendental logarithmic cost function to investigate the presence of scale economies and the interrelationships among inputs of domestic capital, labour and intermediate goods as well as outsourced intermediate products for the Spanish apparel industry and discusses the implications for its future competitiveness and the demand for domestic inputs. The results are consistent with diseconomies of scale or, in the case of one model, possibly constant returns to scale, indicating that some contraction of the industry due to international competition will not raise unit costs. All of the inputs except for capital and intermediate goods were found to be substitutes. An important finding is that the cross elasticity values of both labour and domestic intermediate goods with respect to the price of outsourced goods have risen over time, indicating an increased sensitivity of the quantity demanded of these home-country inputs to the price of imported intermediate goods. It follows that domestic input markets will be more substantially affected by international prices for outsourced inputs as the industry tries to maintain its competitiveness in the global environment. |
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Keywords: | Spain apparel industry globalization Agreement on Textiles and Clothing |
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