Global Value Chains and Local Business Environments: Which Factors Really Matter in Developing Countries?

被引:0
|
作者
Marion Dovis
Chahir Zaki
机构
[1] Aix-Marseille University,CNRS and EHESS, Aix
[2] Cairo University and ERF,Marseille School of Economics
来源
Review of Industrial Organization | 2020年 / 57卷
关键词
Global value chains; Firms; Business environment; F12; F23;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study assesses the effect of an economy’s business environment on the ability of firms to be part of a global value chain (GVC). With the use of a comprehensive firm-level dataset from the World Bank Enterprise Survey—and with a special focus on the countries of the Middle East and North Africa and East Asia and Pacific regions—the contribution of the paper is threefold: First, it provides a range of measures of the characteristics of firms that would identify a firm as likely to be integrated into a GVC. Second, it examines the association between an array of business environment variables—infrastructure; access to finance; fiscal policy; enforcement of contracts; ease of obtaining permits; extent of the informal sector; trade procedures; and firm and investor security—and the likelihood of a firm’s being integrated into a GVC. Third, we examine these effects separately for small and large firms and for sectors with high and low tariffs. Our main findings show that, in general, the number of days that are required to pay taxes, the number of procedures that are necessary to register property, and the time to export and to import have a significantly negative association with the likelihood of a firm’s integration into a GVC. More heterogeneity is observed at the regional level, at the firm size level, and for sectors with high versus low tariffs.
引用
收藏
页码:481 / 513
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Global Value Chains and Local Business Environments: Which Factors Really Matter in Developing Countries?
    Dovis, Marion
    Zaki, Chahir
    REVIEW OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION, 2020, 57 (02) : 481 - 513
  • [2] Integration into global value chains and firm innovation: does local business environment matter?
    Vu, Nam Hoang
    Hoang, Tram Bao
    Bui, Duong Tung
    Nguyen, Quan Hong
    JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL AND BUSINESS ECONOMICS, 2024, 51 (04): : 725 - 791
  • [3] Global value chains and carbon emission reduction in developing countries: Does industrial upgrading matter?
    Wang, Shuhong
    Wang, Xiaoqing
    Chen, Suisui
    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REVIEW, 2022, 97
  • [4] Global value chains and product sophistication in developing countries; the case of Indian manufacturing
    Banga, Karishma
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, 2023, 32 (04): : 509 - 536
  • [5] Opportunities for Smallholders from Developing Countries in Global Value Chains
    Lutz, Clemens
    REVIEW OF SOCIAL ECONOMY, 2012, 70 (04) : 468 - 476
  • [6] Developing local industries and global value chains: The case of offshore wind
    van der Loos, Adriaan
    Langeveld, Rowan
    Hekkert, Marko
    Negro, Simona
    Truffer, Bernhard
    TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 2022, 174
  • [7] Global value chains and technology transfer: new evidence from developing countries
    Rigo, Davide
    REVIEW OF WORLD ECONOMICS, 2021, 157 (02) : 271 - 294
  • [8] Global value chains and technology transfer: new evidence from developing countries
    Davide Rigo
    Review of World Economics, 2021, 157 : 271 - 294
  • [9] Global Value Chains in Developing Countries: A Relational Perspective from Coffee and Garments
    Boudreau, Laura
    Cajal-Grossi, Julia
    Macchiavello, Rocco
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES, 2023, 37 (03): : 59 - 86
  • [10] The Global Value Chains in BRICS Countries
    Ye M.
    Voigt S.
    Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences, 2014, 7 (3) : 411 - 420