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Quality lessons for policy
Our novel insights enrich our understanding of how multi-product firms participate in the global economy when both cost and quality competitiveness influence consumer behaviour and firm performance. This sheds light on the economic impact of globalisation and optimal policy design.
First, we know that reallocations across firms and across products within firms mediate trade-induced gains in aggregate and firm productivity, respectively (Mayer et al. 2016, Melitz and Redding 2015). However, financial and labour market frictions distort trade activity and hinder these reallocations (Helpman et al. 2010, Manova 2013). Separately, more successful exporters hire more skilled workers and pay higher wages, while sophisticated inputs and skilled labour are complementary in the production of output quality (Verhoogen 2008). In light of this, our results suggest that quality-driven reallocations across products within firms are a key mechanism through which trade liberalisation affects firm performance and aggregate welfare, as well as inequality along the firm size and worker skill distributions.
Second, our findings imply large variation in marginal costs, quality, mark-ups and prices across firms and across products within firms, which complicates the measurement of firm productivity from observable data (De Loecker and Warzynski 2012, Eckel et al. 2015). Accounting for quality and mark-up variation is thus of first-order importance for a wide range of micro and macro analyses that rely on price data or require precise productivity estimates. This includes evaluating the price and productivity impact of trade reforms, the design and implementation of anti-dumping and competition policies, and the pass-through of exchange rate fluctuations to producer and consumer prices.
Last, we inform export promotion strategies in developing countries as a means to economic growth. While policymakers often prioritise cost competitiveness, our analysis indicates that quality upgrading is key to export success. This justifies policies that encourage investment not only in production efficiency, but also in quality capabilities. It also highlights the role of import liberalisation – access to a wider variety of inputs and to foreign inputs of superior quality compared to those which are available domestically enables firms to expand product scope, productivity and quality (Amiti and Konings 2007, Goldberg et al. 2010). Equally important is access to skilled labour and effective management practices (Bloom et al. 2016).
References
Amiti, M and J Konings (2007), “Trade liberalization, intermediate inputs, and productivity: Evidence from Indonesia”, American Economic Review 97(5): 1611-38.
Bernard, A, S Redding and P Schott (2010), “Multiple-product firms and product switching”, American Economic Review 100(1): 70-97.
Bernard, A, S Redding and P Schott (2011), “Multi-product firms and trade liberalization”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 126(3): 1271-318.
Bloom, N, K Manova, J Van Reenen, S Sun and Z Yu (2016), “Managing trade: Evidence from China and the US”, Stanford University mimeo.
De Loecker, J and F Warzynski (2012), “Mark-ups and firm-level export status”, American Economic Review 102(6): 2437-71.
Eckel, C, L Iacovone, P Neary and B Javorcik (2015), “Multi-product firms at home and away: Cost- versus quality-based competence”, Journal of International Economics 95: 216-32.
Goldberg, P, A Khandelwal, N Pavcnik and P Topalova (2010), “Imported intermediate inputs and domestic product growth: Evidence from India”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 125(4): 1727-67.
Helpman, E, O Itskhoki and S Redding (2010), “Inequality and unemployment in a global economy”, Econometrica 78(4): 1239-83.
Khandelwal, A (2010), “The long and short (of) quality ladders”, Review of Economic Studies 77(4): 1450-76.
Kugler, M and E Verhoogen (2009), “Plants and imported inputs: New facts and an interpretation”, American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 99(2): 501-7.
Manova, K (2013), “Credit constraints, heterogeneous firms, and international trade”, Review of Economic Studies 80: 711-744.
Manova, K and Z Zhang (2012), “Export prices across firms and export destinations”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 127: 379-436.
Manova, K and Z Yu (2016), “Multi-product firms and product quality”, Journal of International Economics (forthcoming), NBER Working Paper 18637.
Mayer, T, M Melitz and G Ottaviano (2016), “Product mix and firm productivity responses to trade competition”, Harvard University mimeo.
Melitz, M and S Redding (2015), “New trade models, new welfare implications”, American Economic Review 105(3): 1105-46.
Sutton, J (2012), Competing in capabilities: The globalization process, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Verhoogen, E (2008), “Trade, quality upgrading and wage inequality in the Mexican manufacturing sector”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 123(2): 489-530.
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