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An 'Austrian' Model of Global Value Chains

Pol Antràs, Harvard University
Thursday, April 24, 2025
11:30 AM-1:00 PM
201 Lorch Hall Map
I develop a stylized model of multi-stage production in which the time length of each stage is endogenously determined. Letting the production process mature for a longer period of time increases labor productivity, but it comes at the cost of higher working capital needs for firms. Under autarky, countries with lower interest rates feature longer production processes, higher labor productivity, and higher wages. In a free trade equilibrium, countries with lower interest rates specialize in relatively ‘time intensive’ stages in global value chains (GVCs). Yet, if free trade brings about interest rate equalization, wages are also equalized and the pattern of trade is instead shaped by capital intensity and capital abundance, regardless of the time intensity of the various stages. Reductions in trade costs lead to patterns of specialization associated with higher amounts of vertical specialization in world trade. A worldwide decline in interest rates similarly fosters an increase in the share of GVC trade in world trade. The framework also sheds light on the role of trade credit and trade finance in shaping international specialization.
Building: Lorch Hall
Website:
Event Type: Workshop / Seminar
Tags: Economics, International, seminar
Source: Happening @ Michigan from Department of Economics, International Economics, Department of Economics Seminars