"Globalization" and Relocation in a Vertically Differentiated Industry

This paper uses a vertical differentiation duopoly framework to analyze firms' relocation decisions, when the removal of trade barriers or restrictions on capital outflows or inflows ("globalization") allows them to serve the domestic market through foreign plants in low-wage countries. The relocation of the entire industry yields net welfare costs, but the relocation of one (and only one) firm, may be welfare improving. When the economy is "high-(or low-) quality biased," the relocation of the firm producing the high- (or low-) quality variant is preferred, on welfare terms, to that of other firms, if the wage differential is large enough.
Publication date: April 1998
ISBN: 9781451846713
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Labor , Labor , International - Economics , International - Economics , WP , incremental cost , market share , Production Relocation , Vertical Differentiation , Bertrand Competition , Globalization , low-quality firm , high-quality firm , location decision , relocation choice , labor cost wi , Wages , Labor costs , Trade liber

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