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The Role of Imports from the Newly-industrializing Countries in U.S. Production

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1985 67(1), 108
This paper examines the relationship among U.S. imports from the NICs, imports from developed countries, capital, and labor in the production of goods for final demand. Import demand and substitution elasticities are estimated for the period 1960-80. U.S. imports from the NICs are found to be complements with both labor and imports from industrialized countries. This indicates that the substitution effect resulting from a reduction in the price of imports from the NICs would lead to a net increase in employment. Multilateral tariff cuts by the United States would increase the demand for NIC goods despite a reduction in their preferential tariff margins.

R&D Investment, Exporting, and Productivity Dynamics

American Economic Review 2011 101(4), 1312-1344
This paper estimates a dynamic structural model of a producer's decision to invest in R&D and export, allowing both choices to endogenously affect the future path of productivity. Using plant-level data for the Taiwanese electronics industry, both activities are found to have a positive effect on the plant's future productivity. This in turn drives more plants to self-select into both activities, contributing to further productivity gains. Simulations of an expansion of the export market are shown to increase both exporting and R&D investment and generate a gradual within-plant productivity improvement. (JEL D24, F14, G31, L63, O31, O33)

R&D Investments, Exporting, and the Evolution of Firm Productivity

American Economic Review 2008 98(2), 451-456
A large empirical literature has documented that firm-level differences in productivity, size, ownership status, and other characteristics are crucial to understanding differences in firms’ decisions to export. The evidence strongly supports the self-selection of more productive firms into export markets, but there has been more mixed evidence on the subsequent feedback effects of exporting on the future path of firm productivity. Several recent papers have introduced a new dimension into this export-productivity relationship: firm-level investments in productivity-enhancing activities such as R&D. James A. Costantini and Marc J. Melitz (2007), Alla Lileeva and Daniel Trefler (2007), and Paula Bustos (2006) explore the linkages between investments in innovation, productivity, and the decision to export in the context of the liberalization of trade regimes. Aw, Roberts, and Tor Winston (2007) have also found a significant role for firm R&D investments in explaining Taiwanese firm export patterns, as well as interaction effects between firm R&D and export choices in explaining productivity change. In this paper we summarize some empirical results from our research project to develop an estimable structural model of the joint exportinvestment decision. In the theoretical model, firms invest in R&D and physical capital, which can affect the path of future productivity for the firm. R&D investment, through its effect on future productivity, increases the profits from exporting, and participation in the export market raises the return to R&D investments. The theoretical model yields equations for the policy functions for R&D investment, physical investment, and the exporting decision, as well as the evolution of firm-level profitability, that can be estimated with micro datasets containing R&D Investments, Exporting, and the Evolution of Firm Productivity