Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s
The report examines the export performance of Mexican enterprises in the 1990s, to determine whether the intended effects of trade liberalization, have indeed occurred. The depth, and extent of changes in outward orientation of firms are explored,...
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/09/693175/mexico-export-dynamics-productivity-analysis-mexican-manufacturing-1990s http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14984 |
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okr-10986-149842021-04-23T14:03:16Z Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s World Bank EXPORT DEVELOPMENT TRADE POLICY TRADE AGREEMENTS FINANCIAL CRISES MANUFACTURED EXPORTS DATABASES CASE STUDIES ENTERPRISES SURVEYS REGRESSION ANALYSIS PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION DOMESTIC EQUITIES EXPORT COSTING & PRICING EXPORT SHORTFALLS EXPORT VALUE AGGREGATE DEMAND AGGREGATE TRADE AGGREGATE TRADE FLOWS BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANK LENDING CAPITAL ACCOUNT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL GOODS CAPITAL INFLOWS CENTRAL BANK CURRENCY CURRENT ACCOUNT CUSTOMS DEVALUATION DOMESTIC DEMAND DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC INTEREST DOMESTIC MARKET ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION ECONOMISTS ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXPORT BEHAVIOR EXPORT DYNAMICS EXPORT GROWTH EXPORT MARKET EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT ORIENTATION EXPORT PERFORMANCE EXPORT SECTOR EXPORT VALUE EXPORT VOLUME EXPORTERS EXPORTS EXTERNAL SHOCKS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN MARKETS FREE TRADE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT GDP GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATES IMPORT TARIFFS IMPORTS INDUSTRIAL POLICIES INDUSTRIAL POLICY INDUSTRIAL SECTOR INTEREST RATES INTERNAL MARKET INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT FLOWS LABOR COSTS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE LORENZ CURVE MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS MACROECONOMIC CONTEXT MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS MANUFACTURED EXPORTS METAL PRODUCTS MONETARY POLICY NET EXPORTS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS OIL OIL EXPORTS OIL PRICES OIL REVENUES OPENNESS POLICY REFORM PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY STANDARDS QUANTITATIVE RESTRICTIONS REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL GDP REFORM PROGRAM REGRESSION ANALYSIS REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RESOURCE ALLOCATION STATISTICAL ANALYSIS STRUCTURAL REFORMS SUNK COSTS TARIFF BARRIERS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY TECHNOLOGY DIFFUSION TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE AGREEMENT TRADE AGREEMENTS TRADE BALANCE TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY TRADE REFORM TRADING PARTNERS UNIT LABOR COSTS VALUE OF EXPORTS WAGES WEALTH WORKER TRAINING The report examines the export performance of Mexican enterprises in the 1990s, to determine whether the intended effects of trade liberalization, have indeed occurred. The depth, and extent of changes in outward orientation of firms are explored, as well as the characteristics of firms that became more export-oriented. Further analysis focus on the degree of linkage between the export sector, and domestic economy, or conversely, the extent to which the export sector is an "enclave", whose behavior is independent from the rest of the economy. The factors that determine export behavior, and the extent to which exporting is "permanent" vs. "transitory" are reviewed, together with the extent to which productivity gains from exporting have been realized, whether through learning by direct exporters, or through spillovers to indirect exporters, and others. The report relies on statistical analysis of cross-section/time-series databases, with observations at the level of the individual plant, or firm, which led to the annual industrial survey (1993-98), the monthly census of plants under the "maquila" regime (1990-98), and, the Central Bank customs database of export/import at the firm level (1991-98). Conclusions suggest that while exporters have higher productivity rates, profitability is equal compared to non-exporters, but inventory turnover tends to be higher for non-exporters, possibly explained by higher re-stocking costs for exporters. 2013-08-09T20:53:06Z 2013-08-09T20:53:06Z 2000-09-15 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/09/693175/mexico-export-dynamics-productivity-analysis-mexican-manufacturing-1990s http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14984 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Latin America & Caribbean Mexico |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
EXPORT DEVELOPMENT TRADE POLICY TRADE AGREEMENTS FINANCIAL CRISES MANUFACTURED EXPORTS DATABASES CASE STUDIES ENTERPRISES SURVEYS REGRESSION ANALYSIS PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION DOMESTIC EQUITIES EXPORT COSTING & PRICING EXPORT SHORTFALLS EXPORT VALUE AGGREGATE DEMAND AGGREGATE TRADE AGGREGATE TRADE FLOWS BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANK LENDING CAPITAL ACCOUNT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL GOODS CAPITAL INFLOWS CENTRAL BANK CURRENCY CURRENT ACCOUNT CUSTOMS DEVALUATION DOMESTIC DEMAND DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC INTEREST DOMESTIC MARKET ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION ECONOMISTS ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXPORT BEHAVIOR EXPORT DYNAMICS EXPORT GROWTH EXPORT MARKET EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT ORIENTATION EXPORT PERFORMANCE EXPORT SECTOR EXPORT VALUE EXPORT VOLUME EXPORTERS EXPORTS EXTERNAL SHOCKS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN MARKETS FREE TRADE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT GDP GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATES IMPORT TARIFFS IMPORTS INDUSTRIAL POLICIES INDUSTRIAL POLICY INDUSTRIAL SECTOR INTEREST RATES INTERNAL MARKET INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT FLOWS LABOR COSTS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE LORENZ CURVE MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS MACROECONOMIC CONTEXT MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS MANUFACTURED EXPORTS METAL PRODUCTS MONETARY POLICY NET EXPORTS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS OIL OIL EXPORTS OIL PRICES OIL REVENUES OPENNESS POLICY REFORM PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY STANDARDS QUANTITATIVE RESTRICTIONS REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL GDP REFORM PROGRAM REGRESSION ANALYSIS REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RESOURCE ALLOCATION STATISTICAL ANALYSIS STRUCTURAL REFORMS SUNK COSTS TARIFF BARRIERS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY TECHNOLOGY DIFFUSION TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE AGREEMENT TRADE AGREEMENTS TRADE BALANCE TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY TRADE REFORM TRADING PARTNERS UNIT LABOR COSTS VALUE OF EXPORTS WAGES WEALTH WORKER TRAINING |
spellingShingle |
EXPORT DEVELOPMENT TRADE POLICY TRADE AGREEMENTS FINANCIAL CRISES MANUFACTURED EXPORTS DATABASES CASE STUDIES ENTERPRISES SURVEYS REGRESSION ANALYSIS PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION DOMESTIC EQUITIES EXPORT COSTING & PRICING EXPORT SHORTFALLS EXPORT VALUE AGGREGATE DEMAND AGGREGATE TRADE AGGREGATE TRADE FLOWS BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANK LENDING CAPITAL ACCOUNT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL GOODS CAPITAL INFLOWS CENTRAL BANK CURRENCY CURRENT ACCOUNT CUSTOMS DEVALUATION DOMESTIC DEMAND DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC INTEREST DOMESTIC MARKET ECONOMIC CRISIS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC LIBERALIZATION ECONOMISTS ELIMINATION OF TARIFFS EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXPORT BEHAVIOR EXPORT DYNAMICS EXPORT GROWTH EXPORT MARKET EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT ORIENTATION EXPORT PERFORMANCE EXPORT SECTOR EXPORT VALUE EXPORT VOLUME EXPORTERS EXPORTS EXTERNAL SHOCKS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN MARKETS FREE TRADE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT GDP GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATES IMPORT TARIFFS IMPORTS INDUSTRIAL POLICIES INDUSTRIAL POLICY INDUSTRIAL SECTOR INTEREST RATES INTERNAL MARKET INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT FLOWS LABOR COSTS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LIBERALIZATION OF TRADE LORENZ CURVE MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS MACROECONOMIC CONTEXT MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS MANUFACTURED EXPORTS METAL PRODUCTS MONETARY POLICY NET EXPORTS NON-TARIFF BARRIERS OIL OIL EXPORTS OIL PRICES OIL REVENUES OPENNESS POLICY REFORM PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY STANDARDS QUANTITATIVE RESTRICTIONS REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL GDP REFORM PROGRAM REGRESSION ANALYSIS REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RESOURCE ALLOCATION STATISTICAL ANALYSIS STRUCTURAL REFORMS SUNK COSTS TARIFF BARRIERS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL EFFICIENCY TECHNOLOGY DIFFUSION TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE AGREEMENT TRADE AGREEMENTS TRADE BALANCE TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY TRADE REFORM TRADING PARTNERS UNIT LABOR COSTS VALUE OF EXPORTS WAGES WEALTH WORKER TRAINING World Bank Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s |
geographic_facet |
Latin America & Caribbean Mexico |
description |
The report examines the export
performance of Mexican enterprises in the 1990s, to
determine whether the intended effects of trade
liberalization, have indeed occurred. The depth, and extent
of changes in outward orientation of firms are explored, as
well as the characteristics of firms that became more
export-oriented. Further analysis focus on the degree of
linkage between the export sector, and domestic economy, or
conversely, the extent to which the export sector is an
"enclave", whose behavior is independent from the
rest of the economy. The factors that determine export
behavior, and the extent to which exporting is
"permanent" vs. "transitory" are
reviewed, together with the extent to which productivity
gains from exporting have been realized, whether through
learning by direct exporters, or through spillovers to
indirect exporters, and others. The report relies on
statistical analysis of cross-section/time-series databases,
with observations at the level of the individual plant, or
firm, which led to the annual industrial survey (1993-98),
the monthly census of plants under the "maquila"
regime (1990-98), and, the Central Bank customs database of
export/import at the firm level (1991-98). Conclusions
suggest that while exporters have higher productivity rates,
profitability is equal compared to non-exporters, but
inventory turnover tends to be higher for non-exporters,
possibly explained by higher re-stocking costs for exporters. |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s |
title_short |
Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s |
title_full |
Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s |
title_fullStr |
Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s |
title_full_unstemmed |
Export Dynamics and Productivity : Analysis of Mexican Manufacturing in the 1990s |
title_sort |
export dynamics and productivity : analysis of mexican manufacturing in the 1990s |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/09/693175/mexico-export-dynamics-productivity-analysis-mexican-manufacturing-1990s http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14984 |
_version_ |
1764427803154972672 |