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Journal Article

Greasing the Wheels of International Commerce: How Services Facilitate Firms' International Sourcing

Authors

  • Debaere
  • P.
  • Görg
  • H.
  • Raff
  • H.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1111/caje.12006

JEL Classification

F12 L23

Key Words

firm heterogeneity

international trade

Internationaler Handel

off-shoring

services

supply chain management

Related Topics

International Trade

We use unique plant-level data to study the link between the local availability of services and the decision of manufacturing firms to source materials from abroad. To guide our empirical analysis we develop a monopolitic-competition model of the materials sourcing decisions of heterogeneous firms. The model generates predictions about how the intensity of international sourcing of materials depends on a firm's productivity and the availability of local services. These predictions are supported by the data. We find evidence that more productive manufacturing firms tend to have a higher ratio of imported materials to sales. In addition, we find evidence that services grease the wheels of international commerce: A greater availability of services across regions, industries and time increases a firm's foreign sourcing of materials relative to sales. Interestingly, this positive impact of local service availability on imports especially applies to stand-alone firms that, unlike multinationals, are less likely to rely on imported or internally provided services.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Holger Görg, Ph.D.
    Research Director

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Research Center

  • Trade