Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows

In recent decades, the international division of labor has expanded rapidly in the wake of European integration. In this context, especially Western European high-wage countries should have specialized on (human-)capital intensively manufactured goods and should have increasingly sourced labor-inten...

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Main Author: Zeddies, Goetz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università Carlo Cattaneo LIUC 2013-04-01
Series:The European Journal of Comparative Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979201301/182429792013100104.pdf
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spelling doaj-50a484f96604422a9b8715c4764048ac2020-11-24T21:18:08ZengUniversità Carlo Cattaneo LIUCThe European Journal of Comparative Economics1824-29792013-04-0110181107Skill Content of Intra-European Trade FlowsZeddies, GoetzIn recent decades, the international division of labor has expanded rapidly in the wake of European integration. In this context, especially Western European high-wage countries should have specialized on (human-)capital intensively manufactured goods and should have increasingly sourced labor-intensively manufactured goods, especially parts and components, from Eastern European low wage countries. Since this should be beneficial for the high-skilled and harmful to the lower-qualified workforce in high-wage countries, the opening up of Eastern Europe is often considered as a vital reason for increasing unemployment of the lower-qualified in Western Europe. This paper addresses this issue by analyzing the skill content of Western European countries’ bilateral trade using input-output techniques in order to evaluate possible effects of international trade on labor demand. Thereby, differences in factor inputs and production technologies have been considered, allowing for vertical product differentiation. In this case, skill content of bilateral exports and imports partially differs substantially, especially in bilateral trade between Western and Eastern European countries. According to the results, East-West trade should be harmful particularly to the medium-skilled in Western European countries.http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979201301/182429792013100104.pdfEuropean IntegrationInternational TradeLabor DemandInput-Output Analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zeddies, Goetz
spellingShingle Zeddies, Goetz
Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows
The European Journal of Comparative Economics
European Integration
International Trade
Labor Demand
Input-Output Analysis
author_facet Zeddies, Goetz
author_sort Zeddies, Goetz
title Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows
title_short Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows
title_full Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows
title_fullStr Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows
title_full_unstemmed Skill Content of Intra-European Trade Flows
title_sort skill content of intra-european trade flows
publisher Università Carlo Cattaneo LIUC
series The European Journal of Comparative Economics
issn 1824-2979
publishDate 2013-04-01
description In recent decades, the international division of labor has expanded rapidly in the wake of European integration. In this context, especially Western European high-wage countries should have specialized on (human-)capital intensively manufactured goods and should have increasingly sourced labor-intensively manufactured goods, especially parts and components, from Eastern European low wage countries. Since this should be beneficial for the high-skilled and harmful to the lower-qualified workforce in high-wage countries, the opening up of Eastern Europe is often considered as a vital reason for increasing unemployment of the lower-qualified in Western Europe. This paper addresses this issue by analyzing the skill content of Western European countries’ bilateral trade using input-output techniques in order to evaluate possible effects of international trade on labor demand. Thereby, differences in factor inputs and production technologies have been considered, allowing for vertical product differentiation. In this case, skill content of bilateral exports and imports partially differs substantially, especially in bilateral trade between Western and Eastern European countries. According to the results, East-West trade should be harmful particularly to the medium-skilled in Western European countries.
topic European Integration
International Trade
Labor Demand
Input-Output Analysis
url http://eaces.liuc.it/18242979201301/182429792013100104.pdf
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