TY - JOUR
T1 - The world income distribution
T2 - the effects of international unbundling of production
AU - Basco, Sergi
AU - Mestieri, Martí
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Daron Acemoglu, Pol Antràs and Jaume Ventura for useful comments and suggestions, and Guido Lorenzoni, Kiminori Matsuyama, an associate editor and three anonymous referees for comments on earlier drafts. We have also benefited from comments in our presentations at Barcelona GSE Summer Forum, Bank of Spain, Berkeley, Calgary, CEMFI, CEPR-ESSIM, Chicago Fed Trade Conference, IMF, Nottingham, Stanford, UC3M and Universitat de Barcelona. First draft: July 2014. We thank Shekhar Tomar for his excellent research assistance. Basco acknowledges financial support from Fundación Ramón Areces. Mestieri thanks the ANR for their financial support while at TSE.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2019/6/1
Y1 - 2019/6/1
N2 - Trade in intermediates, also known as unbundling of production, and trade in capital have become increasingly important in the world economy during the last 25 years. To jointly study these two phenomena, we develop a dynamic, factor-proportions model with trade in final goods, intermediates and capital where countries differ in their aggregate productivity levels (TFP). Our central result is to identify a novel channel whereby trade in intermediates generates a reallocation of capital across countries that exacerbates world inequality in both income and welfare. With unbundling, high-productivity countries sort into the production of capital-intensive intermediates. They increase their capital stock (via capital imports and accumulation), and, ultimately, their real wages. This exacerbates initial productivity differences across countries and increases world income inequality. We also show that income inequality rises with unbundling (i) even in the case of ex-ante identical countries (symmetry breaking), (ii) when emerging countries start participating in trade in intermediates and (iii) when a labor-saving technology (computerization) is introduced. For an empirically-motivated model parametrization, middle-income countries experience the largest output decline with unbundling.
AB - Trade in intermediates, also known as unbundling of production, and trade in capital have become increasingly important in the world economy during the last 25 years. To jointly study these two phenomena, we develop a dynamic, factor-proportions model with trade in final goods, intermediates and capital where countries differ in their aggregate productivity levels (TFP). Our central result is to identify a novel channel whereby trade in intermediates generates a reallocation of capital across countries that exacerbates world inequality in both income and welfare. With unbundling, high-productivity countries sort into the production of capital-intensive intermediates. They increase their capital stock (via capital imports and accumulation), and, ultimately, their real wages. This exacerbates initial productivity differences across countries and increases world income inequality. We also show that income inequality rises with unbundling (i) even in the case of ex-ante identical countries (symmetry breaking), (ii) when emerging countries start participating in trade in intermediates and (iii) when a labor-saving technology (computerization) is introduced. For an empirically-motivated model parametrization, middle-income countries experience the largest output decline with unbundling.
KW - International capital flows
KW - Symmetry breaking
KW - Trade in intermediates
KW - Unbundling
KW - World income distribution
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U2 - 10.1007/s10887-019-09164-4
DO - 10.1007/s10887-019-09164-4
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85062706128
SN - 1381-4338
VL - 24
SP - 189
EP - 221
JO - Journal of Economic Growth
JF - Journal of Economic Growth
IS - 2
ER -