Offshoring and firm performance: self-selection, effects on performance, or both?

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Authors

This paper uses unique new data for German manufacturing enterprises from matched regular surveys and a special purpose survey to investigate the causal effect of relocation of activities to a foreign country on various dimensions of firm performance. Enterprises that relocated activities abroad in the period 2001-03 for the first time are compared to firms that did not relocate activities abroad before 2006. The comparison is performed for both 2004 (to document differences between the two groups of firms after some of them started to relocate abroad) and for 2000 (when none of them did relocate abroad). It turns out that, compared to non-offshoring firms, firms that relocated activities were larger and more productive, and had a higher share of exports in total sales. All these differences existed in 2000, the year before some firms started to relocate, and this points to self-selection of betterʺ firms into offshoring. This finding is in line with results from recent theoretical models and with results from other countries. To investigate the causal effects of relocation across borders on firm performance, six different variants of a matching approach of firms that did and did not start to relocate abroad in 2001-03 were performed based on a propensity score estimated using firm characteristics in 2000 and the change in the performance variable between 1997 and 2000. The performance of both groups was compared for 2004-06 when some firms were relocating firms and the others were not. Broadly in line with hypotheses derived from the literature there is no evidence that offshoring has a negative causal impact on employment in offshoring firms. The effect is positive and large for productivity, and weak evidence for a positive effect on the wage per employee, the proxy variable for human capital intensity used, is found. Contrary to what is often argued, therefore, we find no evidence for a negative causal effect of offshoring on employment in Germany or on other core dimensions of firm performance.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationLüneburg
PublisherInstitut für Volkswirtschaftslehre der Universität Lüneburg
Number of pages35
Publication statusPublished - 2009

    Research areas

  • Economics - offshoring, Germany, enterprise panel data

Documents

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Heiko Witthöft

Publications

  1. Globalization’s limits to the environmental state? Integrating telecoupling into global environmental governance
  2. Performativity, performance studies and digital cultures
  3. Monitoring im Rahmen der Strategischen Umweltprüfung
  4. An empirical note on wages in an internal labour market
  5. Business Entry and Window of Opportunity
  6. Linking Prefunding Venture Structure and Venture Capital Exit Performance
  7. Laypeople’s Affective Images of Energy Transition Pathways
  8. Management and organization in the work of Michel houellebecq unplugged - voices
  9. The Predictive Power of Social Media Sentiment for Short-Term Stock Movements
  10. A Communicational Disconnect
  11. On the Western Narrative of Empowerment Through ICT
  12. Ökofeminismus
  13. Karten und Pläne
  14. Mitarbeitergeleitete engpassorientierte Steuerung
  15. Error management or error prevention
  16. Translating children’s literature: what, for whom, how, and why. A basic map of actors, factors and contexts
  17. Competitive interactions shape plant responses to nitrogen fertilization and drought
  18. Existenzgründung 1
  19. Armenia
  20. “Coastal landscapes for whom? Adaptation challenges and landscape management in Cornwall”
  21. Über Franz Hessel
  22. Incentives under hybrid activity-based costing systems
  23. Stirbt Daily Mail langsam?
  24. Es geht auch anders!
  25. Der extrovertierte Rechtstaat
  26. Plant resource-use characteristics as predictors for species contribution to community biomass in experimental grasslands
  27. The Revolution Will Not Be Liked
  28. Defining sustainable chemistry-an opportune exercise?
  29. Global assessment of the non-equilibrium concept in rangelands
  30. Using gender theories to analyse nature resource management
  31. Trait emotional intelligence facilitates responses to a social gambling task
  32. Current development of creep-resistant magnesium cast alloys
  33. Mitarbeiterbindung in verschiedenen Altersgruppen