Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness

Increasing fragmentation of production across borders is changing the nature of international competition. As a result, conventional indicators of competitiveness based on gross exports are becoming less informative and new measures are needed. Thi...

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Main Authors: Timmer, Marcel P., Los, Bart, Stehrer, Robert, de Vries, Gaaitzen
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
GDP
WTO
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/04/19344013/fragmentation-incomes-jobs-analysis-european-competitiveness
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17720
id okr-10986-17720
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-177202021-04-23T14:03:40Z Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness Timmer, Marcel P. Los, Bart Stehrer, Robert de Vries, Gaaitzen ACCOUNTING ADVANCED COUNTRIES ADVANCED ECONOMIES AGRICULTURE BENCHMARK BILATERAL TRADE CLOSED ECONOMY COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMERS CONTESTABILITY CURRENCY DEBT DEMAND FUNCTIONS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DIRECT VALUE DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC MARKET DOMESTIC WORKERS DRIVERS ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMICS ELASTICITY EMERGING ECONOMIES EMERGING MARKETS EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT GROWTH ENGINES EQUIPMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATE MOVEMENTS EXCHANGE RATES EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT SECTOR EXPORTS FACTOR PRICES FINAL GOODS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL SERVICES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENTS FOREIGN OWNERSHIP FOREIGN VALUE FOREIGN WORKERS FUTURE RESEARCH GDP GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM GLOBAL MARKET GLOBAL MARKETS GLOBALIZATION GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATES HARMONIZATION INCOME INCOME ELASTICITY OF DEMAND INCOMES INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY INNOVATION INPUT PRICES INTERMEDIATE GOODS INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVENTORIES LABOR COSTS LABOR FORCE LABOR MIGRATION LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LABOUR LABOUR COSTS MACHINERY MANUFACTURES MANUFACTURING MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION MANUFACTURING SECTOR MARKET ECONOMY MARKETING METAL MANUFACTURING MOBILITY OF LABOR NATIONAL ECONOMY NATIONAL INCOME OPEN ECONOMIES OUTPUT RATIO OUTPUTS OUTSOURCING PARTICULAR COUNTRY PRODUCT MARKET PRODUCT MARKETS PRODUCTION CAPACITY PRODUCTION COSTS PRODUCTION FACTORS PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS PRODUCTION INTEGRATION PRODUCTION PROCESS PRODUCTION STRUCTURE PRODUCTION STRUCTURES PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH RAW MATERIALS REAL INCOME REAL WAGES RETAIL RETAIL SERVICES SALES SHARE OF CAPITAL SKILLED LABOR SKILLED WORKERS SPREAD STACKING SUPPLIERS SUPPLY CHAINS TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE TRADE POLICIES VALUE ADDED VALUE OF OUTPUT WAGE GROWTH WAGE INCREASES WAGES WHOLESALING WORK FORCE WORLD ECONOMY WORLD TRADE WTO Increasing fragmentation of production across borders is changing the nature of international competition. As a result, conventional indicators of competitiveness based on gross exports are becoming less informative and new measures are needed. This paper proposes an ex-post accounting framework of the value added and workers that are directly and indirectly related to the production of final manufacturing goods. The framework focuses on manufactures global value chain income and manufactures global value chain jobs. The paper outlines these concepts and provides trends in European countries based on a recent multi-sector, input-output model of the world economy. The analysis finds that since 1995, revealed comparative advantage of the European Union 27 is shifting to activities related to the production of nonelectrical machinery and transport equipment. The workers involved in manufactures global value chains are increasingly in services, rather than manufacturing industries. The analysis also finds a strong shift toward activities carried out by high-skilled workers, highlighting the uneven distributional effects of fragmentation. The results show that a global value chain perspective is needed to inform the policy debates on competitiveness. 2014-04-10T19:29:28Z 2014-04-10T19:29:28Z 2014-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/04/19344013/fragmentation-incomes-jobs-analysis-european-competitiveness http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17720 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6833 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Europe and Central Asia
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 ACCOUNTING
ADVANCED COUNTRIES
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
AGRICULTURE
BENCHMARK
BILATERAL TRADE
CLOSED ECONOMY
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMERS
CONTESTABILITY
CURRENCY
DEBT
DEMAND FUNCTIONS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DIRECT VALUE
DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME
DOMESTIC ECONOMY
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC WORKERS
DRIVERS
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMICS
ELASTICITY
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKETS
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT GROWTH
ENGINES
EQUIPMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATE MOVEMENTS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT SECTOR
EXPORTS
FACTOR PRICES
FINAL GOODS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL SERVICES
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN VALUE
FOREIGN WORKERS
FUTURE RESEARCH
GDP
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM
GLOBAL MARKET
GLOBAL MARKETS
GLOBALIZATION
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATES
HARMONIZATION
INCOME
INCOME ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
INCOMES
INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
INNOVATION
INPUT PRICES
INTERMEDIATE GOODS
INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTORIES
LABOR COSTS
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MIGRATION
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOUR
LABOUR COSTS
MACHINERY
MANUFACTURES
MANUFACTURING
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY
MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION
MANUFACTURING SECTOR
MARKET ECONOMY
MARKETING
METAL MANUFACTURING
MOBILITY OF LABOR
NATIONAL ECONOMY
NATIONAL INCOME
OPEN ECONOMIES
OUTPUT RATIO
OUTPUTS
OUTSOURCING
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
PRODUCT MARKET
PRODUCT MARKETS
PRODUCTION CAPACITY
PRODUCTION COSTS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PRODUCTION INTEGRATION
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PRODUCTION STRUCTURE
PRODUCTION STRUCTURES
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
RAW MATERIALS
REAL INCOME
REAL WAGES
RETAIL
RETAIL SERVICES
SALES
SHARE OF CAPITAL
SKILLED LABOR
SKILLED WORKERS
SPREAD
STACKING
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
TRADE POLICIES
VALUE ADDED
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE GROWTH
WAGE INCREASES
WAGES
WHOLESALING
WORK FORCE
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD TRADE
WTO
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
ADVANCED COUNTRIES
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
AGRICULTURE
BENCHMARK
BILATERAL TRADE
CLOSED ECONOMY
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGES
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMERS
CONTESTABILITY
CURRENCY
DEBT
DEMAND FUNCTIONS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DIRECT VALUE
DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME
DOMESTIC ECONOMY
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC WORKERS
DRIVERS
ECONOMIC POLICY
ECONOMICS
ELASTICITY
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKETS
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT GROWTH
ENGINES
EQUIPMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATE MOVEMENTS
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT SECTOR
EXPORTS
FACTOR PRICES
FINAL GOODS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL SERVICES
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN VALUE
FOREIGN WORKERS
FUTURE RESEARCH
GDP
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM
GLOBAL MARKET
GLOBAL MARKETS
GLOBALIZATION
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATES
HARMONIZATION
INCOME
INCOME ELASTICITY OF DEMAND
INCOMES
INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY
INNOVATION
INPUT PRICES
INTERMEDIATE GOODS
INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTORIES
LABOR COSTS
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MIGRATION
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
LABOUR
LABOUR COSTS
MACHINERY
MANUFACTURES
MANUFACTURING
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY
MANUFACTURING PRODUCTION
MANUFACTURING SECTOR
MARKET ECONOMY
MARKETING
METAL MANUFACTURING
MOBILITY OF LABOR
NATIONAL ECONOMY
NATIONAL INCOME
OPEN ECONOMIES
OUTPUT RATIO
OUTPUTS
OUTSOURCING
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
PRODUCT MARKET
PRODUCT MARKETS
PRODUCTION CAPACITY
PRODUCTION COSTS
PRODUCTION FACTORS
PRODUCTION FUNCTION
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS
PRODUCTION INTEGRATION
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PRODUCTION STRUCTURE
PRODUCTION STRUCTURES
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
RAW MATERIALS
REAL INCOME
REAL WAGES
RETAIL
RETAIL SERVICES
SALES
SHARE OF CAPITAL
SKILLED LABOR
SKILLED WORKERS
SPREAD
STACKING
SUPPLIERS
SUPPLY CHAINS
TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE
TRADE POLICIES
VALUE ADDED
VALUE OF OUTPUT
WAGE GROWTH
WAGE INCREASES
WAGES
WHOLESALING
WORK FORCE
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD TRADE
WTO
Timmer, Marcel P.
Los, Bart
Stehrer, Robert
de Vries, Gaaitzen
Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6833
description Increasing fragmentation of production across borders is changing the nature of international competition. As a result, conventional indicators of competitiveness based on gross exports are becoming less informative and new measures are needed. This paper proposes an ex-post accounting framework of the value added and workers that are directly and indirectly related to the production of final manufacturing goods. The framework focuses on manufactures global value chain income and manufactures global value chain jobs. The paper outlines these concepts and provides trends in European countries based on a recent multi-sector, input-output model of the world economy. The analysis finds that since 1995, revealed comparative advantage of the European Union 27 is shifting to activities related to the production of nonelectrical machinery and transport equipment. The workers involved in manufactures global value chains are increasingly in services, rather than manufacturing industries. The analysis also finds a strong shift toward activities carried out by high-skilled workers, highlighting the uneven distributional effects of fragmentation. The results show that a global value chain perspective is needed to inform the policy debates on competitiveness.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Timmer, Marcel P.
Los, Bart
Stehrer, Robert
de Vries, Gaaitzen
author_facet Timmer, Marcel P.
Los, Bart
Stehrer, Robert
de Vries, Gaaitzen
author_sort Timmer, Marcel P.
title Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness
title_short Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness
title_full Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness
title_fullStr Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness
title_full_unstemmed Fragmentation, Incomes, and Jobs : An Analysis of European Competitiveness
title_sort fragmentation, incomes, and jobs : an analysis of european competitiveness
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/04/19344013/fragmentation-incomes-jobs-analysis-european-competitiveness
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17720
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