Title: Lecture 4: MNE and Wages
1Lecture 4 MNE and Wages
- Developed and Developing Economies
2High Education Unemployment Rate
3Anti-Globalization Movement
- Low wages (and bad working conditions) of workers
in developing countries export industries ? Not
helpful for workers - Is the critique reasonable?
- Not in the economic sense
- Ricardian model comparative advantages
- Why do developing countries have cost advantages?
- Labor standards, environmental policy
4Globalization (Developed vs.Developing Countries)
- Rise in export of manufacturing goods from
developing countries (major shift) - Low wages in developing countries
- Is this a problem?
- Ricardian model
- Relative demand for unskilled labor
- Heckscher-Ohlin model
5Ricardian model Low wages Is this a problem?
6I. Ricardian model Low wages Is this a problem?
- Free trade ? specialization aH/aH gt w/w gt
aL/aL - 8 gt w/w gt 2, e.g. w 4w
- i. aHw w PH
- w/PH 1 and w/PH1/4
- ii. aL w 2w PL
- Þ w/PL 1/2 and w/PL2
No problem !
7II. The Factor abundance model
- Heckscher-Ohlin model expanding on the
comparative advantage (Ricardian) model by
allowing for multiple factors of production. - Factors of production (not manufactured, used in
a variety of industries, and not internationally
mobile) - Skilled/unskilled labor
- capital
- specific resources (such as gold deposits,
forests, fisheries, oil, etc.)
8II. The Factor abundance model
- Comparative advantage arises from differences in
national factor endowments. - Prediction countries should export goods that
intensively use factors that they possess in
relative abundance.
World Totals
9Impact of Globalization on Developed countries
- Prediction of Heckscher-Ohlin Model Labor are
hurt in the labor scarce country, high-wage
country, i.e. developed countries - i. Shift in relative labor demand for unskilled
labor due to abundance of low-skilled labor in
developing countries - ii. Increasing demand elasticity
10Impact of Globalization on Developed countries
- Shift in relative labor demand for unskilled
- When it falls, the relative demand curve for
unskilled labor shifts in leading to lower
relative wages and employment.
wL/wH
Ls
LD
LD
NL/NH
11Impact of Globalization on Developed countries
- ii. Increasing demand elasticity of labor,
especially unskilled labor - When the world economy integrates it becomes
easier to substitute domestic unskilled labor for
foreign unskilled labor.
wL
Ls
LD(open)
LD (closed)
NL
12Impact of Globalization on Developed countries
wL
- ii. Increasing demand elasticity of labor
- Higher volatility in wages and employment
- Bargaining power of unskilled labor erodes
Ls
LD(open)
LD (closed)
NL
13Relative Wage Rate for SkilledLabor
Evolution of the Skill Premium (Skilled Labor
Requires College Completion)
Source Krusell, Ohanian, Rios-Rull and Violante
14Feenstra and Hanson (1996)
- Outsourcing import of intermediate inputs by
domestic firms - Fragmentation of production process
- Import competition from low-wage countries
implies moving of unskilled intensive activities
abroad - ? skills upgrading within industries
15Feenstra and Hanson (1996)
- Import competition ? outsourcing
- SO import of intermediate inputs (share)
- SM import of final goods (share)
- large positive corr(DSO, DSM ) supports
hypothesis corr(DSO, DSM ) 0.70 - outsourcing ? skills-upgrading within industries
- wage share of skilled labor in industry j
sNj(wHEH/Si(wiEi))j measured by non-production
workers, - DsNj measure of skills-upgrading
- DsNj .. b DSOj..
16Feenstra and Hanson (1996)
- Outsourcing ? skills-upgrading within industries
- b is found to be positive and significant for
1979-90 - Importance
- b 0.384
- DsN 0.389
- DSO 0.313
- Percentage explained by outsourcing
- b DSO/DsN31