The Sector Bias of International Outsourcing - Implications for Industrialized Economies
Publication date
2009
Document type
PhD thesis (dissertation)
Author
Horgos, Daniel
Advisor
Granting institution
Helmut-Schmidt-Universität / Universität der Bundeswehr Hamburg
Exam date
2009-04-01
Organisational unit
DOI
Part of the university bibliography
✅
DDC Class
330 Wirtschaft
Keyword
Fragmentation
Arbeitsmarkt
Abstract
The cumulative thesis „The Sector Bias of International Outsourcing – Implications for Industrialized Economies“ includes four manuscripts investigating different implications of the internationalization of production. While International Outsourcing attracted huge attention within the last decade, the sector bias of International Outsourcing still provides several gaps for theoretical as well as empirical research. This theses tries to contribute to fill some of these gaps. The first manuscript “Labor Market Effects of International Outsourcing: How Measurement Matters” empirically investigates measurement differences of International Outsourcing and its effects on labor market estimation results. The manuscript "The Elasticity of Substitution and the Sector Bias of International Outsourcing: Completing the Puzzle" provides a formal model analyzing general equilibrium effects of International Outsourcing. Since there is no empirical evidence supporting the result that the wage gap between high and low skilled labor can indeed decrease if outsourcing takes place in relative low skill intensive industries, the manuscript "International Outsourcing and the Sector Bias: New Empirical Evidence" contributes to fill this gap. The fourth manuscript "International Outsourcing and Wage Rigidity: A Formal Approach and First Empirical Evidence" provides a formal model and empirical evidence of the implications of International Outsourcing when taking place in industries characterized by low skilled wage rigidities. As the results show, a smaller increase in relative high skill wages has to be bought dearly with an increase in low skilled unemployment.
Version
Not applicable (or unknown)
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Open access