5 research outputs found
Essays on the effects of international competition on firms and the labor market.
This dissertation examines how competition induced by international trade affects firms
and labor markets in developed economies. While international trade benefits the consumer through thedecrease of prices and increases in the varieties that are on offer, trade-induced competition can have
both positive and negative consequences that are not always well understood.
In the first chapter, I critically assess whether Belgian multi-product exporters experience an adjustment
in their product sales distribution as a result from competition in the foreign market. Any shift in the
sales distribution that leads to increased sales of a firm's best performing products could entail an
increase in the productivity of the firm, so that the level of competition a firm faces abroad could
reverberate back to the domestic economy in which the firm produces.
The other three chapters examine the effects of Chinese import competition on both the labor market
and firms. Competition from imported goods originating from China has had strong effects on labor
markets in developed countries and has been a rallying cry that mobilizes disenfranchised labor with
far-reaching political implications. In the second chapter I show that a total of 1.9 million manufacturing
jobs were lost in the Eurozone as a result from Chinese import competition. Moreover, I find it is
important to account for both the industrial specialization of a region as well as the network of supply
linkages, as shocks can spill-over from region to region depending on the level of interconnectedness
of the industries in both regions. By accounting for these input-output linkages, I show that the current
industrial structure of the Eurozone exacerbates rather than mitigates the asymmetric nature of shocks.
In the third chapter, import competition from developing countries is not only considered as a negative
demand shock to firms producing the same goods as those exported by developing countries to
developed economies' markets. Rather, it is treated as a potential positive supply shock since firms can
get access to new intermediates from abroad and more competition in the input market can benefit afirm by lowering production costs of its goods. My co-author and I show that this competition in the
input market positively benefits firm-level employment. However, its effects on the firm vary both with
the size of the firm as well as the share of blue-collar labor employed in the firm.
In the final chapter, a more holistic approach is taken by considering both trade and technology trends
in order to analyze what factors can be associated with labor market polarization in developed
economies. My co-authors and I find that polarization mostly occurs as employment is shifted towards
high- and low-paid jobs within industries and that this type of polarization is a result of the adoption of
ICT in manufacturing industries. About a third of overall EU polarization was caused by structural
changes across industries, where employment became more concentrated in industries with less middlepaid
employees. We find that Chinese import competition aided in this process by decreasing
employment in several manufacturing industries that form a stronghold of middle-paid employment.
While there are large cross-country differences in the observed patterns of employment polarization,
we find no proof that labor market institutions of a country are relevant in determining the level of
polarization that was experienced.status: publishe
Macroeconomic and environmental consequences of circular economy measures in a small open economy
This paper investigates the economy-wide impact of the uptake of circular economy (CE) measures for the small open economy (SOE) of Belgium, in particular the impact of fiscal policies in support of lifetime extension through repair activities of household appliances. The impact assessment is completed by means of a computable general equilibrium model as this allows quantification of both the direct and indirect economic and environmental impact of simulated shocks. The results show that different fiscal policy types can steer an economy into a more circular direction. However, depending on the policy type, the impact on the SOE’s macroeconomic structure and level of circularity differs. Furthermore, common claims attributed to a CE (e.g. local job creation or decreased import dependence) can be, but are not always, valid. Hence, policy-makers must prioritize their most important macroeconomic goals and opt for an according fiscal policy. Finally, this paper finds that the CO2 equivalent emissions calculated from a production (or territorial) perspective increase, while they decrease from a consumption perspective. This is explained by the substitution of international activities by local circular activities. This comparative analysis advocates for the consumption approach to assess the CE’s impact on CO2 equivalent emissions