2013
DOI: 10.1111/caje.12061
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Export‐supporting FDI

Abstract: A large fraction of affiliates owned by multinational manufacturing companies operate in the wholesale and retail sectors. This paper proposes a model of trade, horizontal FDI, and export‐supporting FDI (ESFDI). ESFDI reduces distribution costs abroad, while production remains at home. ESFDI introduces a complementarity between trade and FDI, while trade and production abroad remain substitutes. German firm‐level FDI data show that ESFDI is quantitatively relevant. In line with the model, most firms choose eit… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

2
24
0
2

Year Published

2013
2013
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
8
1

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 38 publications
(29 citation statements)
references
References 41 publications
2
24
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Also the massive outward FDI in the service sector is consistent with such a picture. As emphasized by Krautheim (), the trade service sectors, which typically support the exporting activities of German manufacturing companies, received a fairly large share of the total FDI (17 per cent in 2007), consistent with the scant investment and productivity growth recorded in the German domestic service sectors in the last decade (Coricelli and Wörgötter, ). Furthermore, the expansion of German banks and insurance companies abroad facilitated the foreign activities of the domestic manufacturing sector given their involvement in the management of medium‐size companies.…”
Section: Germany's Socio‐economic Model and Global Competitivenesssupporting
confidence: 52%
“…Also the massive outward FDI in the service sector is consistent with such a picture. As emphasized by Krautheim (), the trade service sectors, which typically support the exporting activities of German manufacturing companies, received a fairly large share of the total FDI (17 per cent in 2007), consistent with the scant investment and productivity growth recorded in the German domestic service sectors in the last decade (Coricelli and Wörgötter, ). Furthermore, the expansion of German banks and insurance companies abroad facilitated the foreign activities of the domestic manufacturing sector given their involvement in the management of medium‐size companies.…”
Section: Germany's Socio‐economic Model and Global Competitivenesssupporting
confidence: 52%
“…The importance of "export-supporting FDI", i.e. foreign investments in distribution to penetrate export markets, has been emphasized by Aeberhardt et al (2009);Arkolakis (2010) and Krautheim (2013). exports; if profitability exceeds the threshold µ EI = 2F I φ − φ 2 + τ , the exporting firm will find it profitable to invest in a distribution network, paying the fixed cost F I to reduce its variable costs. 49 As in our benchmark model, uncertainty can thus lead to a gradual internationalization process, whereby a firm's export entry precedes its FDI entry: during an initial trial period, the firm uses a local agent to distribute its exports in the foreign market; if it discovers that it can earn large enough profits in that market, it invests in distributionoriented FDI.…”
Section: A3: Distribution-oriented Fdimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is distribution-oriented foreign direct investment (FDI), which plays an important role in fostering export services and commodity distribution. Its purpose is to promote sales in the foreign market, so we regard it as export-supporting OFDI (Krautheim 2013). As a result, we propose that China's OFDI has an export-supporting effect and that the relationship between exports and OFDI is complementary.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%