Title: Competing in Capabilities
1CompetinginCapabilities
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3some stories about growth
4some stories about growth
- All you need is Capital
- All you need is Free Trade
5some stories about growth
- All you need is Capital
- All you need is Free Trade
- All you need is Human Capital
6some stories about growth
- All you need is Capital
- All you need is Free Trade
- All you need is Human Capital
- All you need is Good Institutions
7- I want to look at the PROXIMATE causes of
differences in income per capita
8- I want to look at the PROXIMATE causes of
differences in income per capita - not the ultimate causes.
9Globalisation and History
- Three Great Phases
- 1 Late nineteenth century
- 2 The Post-WWII era
- 3 The Current Phase
10History and Theory
- From nineteenth century globalization yo the
Hecksher-Ohlin model - The empirical success of Hecksher-Ohlin
- The ORourke-Williamson anaysis
11History and Theory continued
- Balassas evidence
- The Intra-Industry Trade debate
- The rise of the Dixit-Stiglitz-Krugman model
12History and Theory continued
13Quality and Trade the new literature
14Motivation
- 1 Firms concerns
- 2 Empirical patterns in new firm level data sets
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17-
- Key feature
-
- The consumers choose products offering the best
u/p -
- Implication if ugtv, the market share of a firm
offering u cannot be eroded to zero by any number
of firms offering v -
18Proposition 1 - given any configuration of
capabilities (c1,u1), (c2,u2) . .
(cn,un) there is a lower bound in (c,u) space
below which a firm cannot achieve positive sales
at equilibrium (ex. Cournot equilibrium)
19Competing in Capabilities
20Fixed /Sunk costs
- Iso-elastic response of quality(beta)
- Isoelastic response of labour productivity
(gamma) - Unit variable cost labour cost materials cost
21Proposition 2
Suppose one element in building capability is the
expenditure of fixed outlays (sunk costs) -
Then competition in capability building will
lead to a bound on the number of firms in the
window.
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23X
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27So whats new?
- The model has been chosen so that prices and
qualities, and therefore productivity and quality
enter in a completely symmetric fashion - The key point is that unit materials cost sets a
floor to price, thus limiting the degree to which
changes in wages and productivity can offset
changes in quality
28Quality vs. productivity
- Once raw materials at international prices are an
input. - Wage adjustment can rescue poor productivity
- But not poor quality
29Capability Threshold
uB
WB gtgt0
Quality
WB
0
uB
1/cB
Productivity
30A Digression .
- An extension of the model adds a second parameter
(horizontal differentiation) - This can be further generalized to linkages
between sub-markets - This extension is important in providing an
explanation for cross-industry differences in
market structure
31 s Linkages Across Submarkets
ß Effectiveness of Capability Building
The Dixit/Stiglitz/Krugman Line
Perfect Competition
The Hotelling Line
32A Multi-Country Model
- m industries Cobb-Douglas consumers
- r of these are commodity type, many firms
- m-r have n firms in each of countries A,B
- Country C supplies raw material
- Labour supply same in all
- Capability of B firms lt A firms
33Capabilities, Quality and Wages
First r goods qualities 1, Prod. 1/c1
Remaining goods qualities u in A, v in B
(Prod. Differs also)
A third country produces (only) an intermediate
good, a fixed number of units of which enter into
the production of all three final goods
34Modelling Pre-Globalisation
- The aim is to exclude competition in quality
goods, while allowing A and B to source materials
from C. - Two routes
- (i) Partition country C
- (ii) Unify C but inhabitants are
insensitive to
quality differences
35Three Phases
- Phase I Impact phaseCapabilities given
- Phase II Transfer phase
- Phase III Re-investment (escalation) phase
36Phase I Impact
- There are three regimes, depending on the size of
the gap in capability - Regime I.gap 0
- Regime II..moderate gap
- Regime III.wide gap
37Relative Wages
I
wB
II
wA
III
v
u
1
Relative Quality
38Free Trade
Free Trade
II
II
III
III
b (i)
b (ii)
v/u
v/u
Case (a)
Case (b)
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41Main substantive argument
- The case for globalisation should rest primarily
on the transfer and growth of capabilities it
induces - A fundamental set of mechanisms are driven by the
coexistence of high capabilities and low wages - These mechanisms include, inter alia,
- ---self help driven by new incentives
- ---Transfers via FDI/ Supply chains, etc.