Is Distance Dead?

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Is Distance Dead? Nick Crafts

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Is Distance Dead?. Nick Crafts. Globalization. Integration of markets from falls in transport/communication costs and reduction of policy barriers to trade and foreign investment Gains from trade potentially significant Re-deployment of labour central to this - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Is Distance Dead?

Page 1: Is Distance Dead?

Is Distance Dead?

Nick Crafts

Page 2: Is Distance Dead?

Globalization

• Integration of markets from falls in transport/communication costs and reduction of policy barriers to trade and foreign investment

• Gains from trade potentially significant

• Re-deployment of labour central to this

• Requires sectoral and spatial adjustment

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Source: Maddison (2001)

World Trade/World GDP (%)

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

1820 1913 1950 1973 2000

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Source: Obstfeld & Taylor (2004)

FOREIGN ASSETS/WORLD GDP%

0 20 40 60 80 100

1870

1914

1930

1945

1960

1980

2000

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Death of Distance: Implications

• Transport and communications costs melt away

• Economic activity disperses

• Cheap labour on your doorstep

• Jobs offshored

• Race to the bottom

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BLS (2004)

Employer Wage Costs, 2003 ($ per hour)

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5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Germany UnitedStates

UK Czech R. India China

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Race to the Bottom

• Welfare state developed in immobile capital era

• High welfare spending and mobile capital is unprecedented

• Tax competition and death of distance would undermine big government

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Source: Lindert (2004), OECD (2005)

Social Transfers in Old OECD (%GDP in median country)

0

5

10

15

20

25

1910 1930 1960 1980 2001

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Transport/Communication Costs

• VERY HIGH: activity is dispersed

• VERY LOW: activity is dispersed

• INTERMEDIATE: agglomeration with feedback effects based on large markets and linkages

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Factors in Industrial Location Decisions

• Market Access

• Unit Costs

• Human Capital

• Institutional Quality

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Agglomeration Benefits(Venables, 2001)

• External economies of scale

• Lots of the right people in the same place

• Productivity advantages of bigger cities

• Cannot easily be replicated

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Taxing CapitalAverage OECD Corporate tax rates have fallen since early 1980s by about 15% points (statutory), 10% points (effective) (Devereux et al., 2002)

BUT

No downward trend in corporate tax revenues which in any case are only about 3% GDP

AND

Continuing importance of agglomeration and market access underpins Europe’s ability to carry on taxing capital (Baldwin and Krugman, 2004)

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Changes in World Economic Geography

• Industrialization and de-industrialization

• Concentration of world manufacturing production and, even more so, exports

• Changes in location influenced by transport costs and agglomeration benefits

• Not steady convergence of poor to rich but rapid transition of select few

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Source: Crafts and Venables (2001)

World Manufactured Exports (% Shares)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

1880 1913 1955 2000

UK Rest W. Europe North America Japan S + SE Asia China

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Economic Geography and International Inequality (Redding and Venables, 2004)

• Most (60-70%) cross-country income variation accounted for simply by location relative to other countries

–market access (export demand)

–supplier access (import supply)

• Move 50% closer to trading partners would raise income by about 25%

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More Results from Redding & Venables

• Moving Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe to Central Europe would raise income by 67% and 80% respectively

• Making Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe ‘open economies’ would raise income by 21% and 28% respectively

• Other variables do affect income levels including institutions

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Steam Power and Industrial Location

• Reduced transport costs for goods rather than services both on land and at sea

• Industry moved closer to natural resources

• Manufacturing cities proliferated in Europe and North America

• Centralizing not dispersing

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Mass Production and Mass Distribution (Chandler, 1977)

• Developed in a subset of American industry in late 19th century

• Based on integration of the market following completion of main rail network

• Changed American industrial geography …. centralizing rather than dispersing

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Lancashire Textiles and Globalization (Leunig, 2005)

• Lancashire a high wage industry: 6 x India and Japan in 1910

• But continued to dominate world trade (60% world market share in cottons in 1910)

• Unit costs lower than India or Japan even before adjusting for output quality

• Lancashire flourished because of agglomeration benefits ..... its productivity exceeded other British locations by 33%

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Distance Still Matters for Trade

• CIF-FOB margin has halved since 1960 (Clark et al., 2004)

• Elasticity of trade with respect to transport costs at least -2 (Limao and Venables, 2001)

BUT

• Gravity coefficient implies distance impeded trade 24% more in the 1990s than in the 1960s (Didier and Head, 2004)

• Trade costs have fallen less than transport costs and have fallen fastest among nearby countries (Novy, 2006)

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Source: Venables (2001)

Economic Interactions and Distance

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20

40

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80

100

120

1000km 2000km 4000km 8000km

Trade FDI

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UK Bilateral Trade Costs: Tariff Equivalent (%) (Novy, 2006)

1960 2002

Germany 57.7 38.9

France 64.7 41.6

USA 60.3 54.1

Australia 44.5 66.9

Canada 47.5 67.8

Japan 81.8 70.9

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Average Trade Costs: USA, 1999(Anderson & van Wincoop, 2004)

• Policy barriers to trade now quite low but other costs still high

• Tariffs and NTBs equivalent to import tax of 8%

• Total barriers to international trade equivalent to import tax of 74%

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Gravity Models

• Empirical models to explain volume of trade flows

• Bilateral trade flows explained by incomes and population and distance as explanatory variable that reduces trade ceteris paribus

• Augmented gravity models can be used to estimate impact of other variables such as common language, common currency etc.

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Breakdown of Trade Costs

Border-Related Costs1.08 (Tariffs & NTBs) x 1.07 (language) x 1.14 (currency) x 1.06 (information) x 1.03 (security) = 1.44

Transport Costs1.08 (direct) x 1.09 (time) = 1.21

Total Trade CostsBorder-related x transport = 1.44 x 1.21 = 1.74

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Offshoring: Evidence

• 14 million US service sector jobs “vulnerable” (96 million not) (Garner, 2004)

• Offshoring of business services will increase 20-fold in five years to 2007; typical cost savings 20%-40% (UNCTAD, 2004)

• Payroll services, IT services, transaction processing, software development, telemarketing etc. etc.

• Offshoring works for activities that are routine, where performance is easy to verify, for impersonal rather than personal services (Blinder, 2006)

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Top 10 Offshoring LocationsSource: A. T.Kearney (2005)

1. India

2. China

3. Malaysia

4. Philippines

5. Singapore

6. Thailand

7. Czech Republic

8. Chile

9. Canada

10. Brazil

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Offshoring: Evaluation

• It is win-win when markets work well

• Social gain of 17 cents on each $1 spent by US (McKinsey, 2005)

• Re-employment of displaced workers less likely in France and Germany so offshoring much less attractive

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Service Offshoring and ProductivityAmiti & Wei (2005)

• Service offshoring raised American manufacturing labour productivity by 3-4.5% between 1992 and 2000

• Represents about 1/8th productivity growth

• Adverse effects on employment at micro but not macro level

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London as a Financial Centre

• Agglomeration where size matters

• Benefits from thick labour markets and importance of proximity for deal-making

• Clerical jobs will increasingly be offshored

• This will strengthen the core business

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UK Asset Management: Core BusinessOXERA (2005)

Importance Score

Financial Infrastructure 4.00 3.96

Size of Labour Pool 3.96 4.24

Quality of Life 3.77 3.36

Market Liquidity 3.69 4.29

Regulatory Regime 3.69 3.40

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UK Asset Management: Back-OfficeOXERA (2005)

Importance Score

Total Labour Cost 4.00 2.74

Size of Labour Pool 3.92 4.08

Flexibility of Labour Market 3.89 3.22

Property Rentals 3.59 2.11

Financial Infrastructure 3.42 3.85

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The Beveridge Curve

UV1

UV2

Unemployment rate

Va

can

cy r

ate

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Beveridge Curves(Nickell et al., 2001)

• Shift out everywhere in 1970s, 1980s

• This has been reversed in UK but not in France or Germany

• Reflects labour market institutions especially those important for search and matching efficiency in context of globalization

• Geographic mobility, regional wage flexibility, ALMPs help

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Source: OECD (2005)

Long Term Unemployment Rate, 2004 (% unemployed 1 year or more)

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1

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6

EU15 USA FRANCE GERMANY UK

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Distance is Still Alive and Well

• ICT is rearranging geography not abolishing it

• Race to the bottom fears are countered by agglomeration benefits and advantages of proximity

BUT

• Those who benefit most from globalization will be the most successful at re-deploying labour