2019
DOI: 10.1257/aer.20161345
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Brands in Motion: How Frictions Shape Multinational Production

Abstract: Following the 2016 Leave vote in the referendum on UK membership in the EU and the election of Donald Trump, trade agreements have entered a period of great instability. To predict the impact of possible disruptions to existing arrangements requires counterfactual analysis that takes into account the complex set of factors influencing the production and marketing strategies of multinational corporations. We estimate a model of multinational decision-making in the car industry. This model predicts the productio… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…This added cost can be interpreted as a reduced-form way to capture the costs of importing inputs (Ramondo and Rodríguez-Clare, 2013) or knowledge (Keller and Yeaple, 2013) from the headquarters, or perhaps the costs of adapting production to a foreign and unfamiliar environment. An alternative cost of multinational activity features prominently in the recent work of Head and Mayer (2019), who argue that firms also incur adaptation costs when marketing goods in countries distinct from their origin country, regardless of where those goods are produced. They argue that this is an especially important feature of the car industry, and they estimate an industry equilibrium model in which car makers decide on the optimal sourcing of their car models taking into account where their headquarters are located, where they have assembly plants (which are fixed in their model), and where consumers are.…”
Section: Horizontal and Export-platform Fdimentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This added cost can be interpreted as a reduced-form way to capture the costs of importing inputs (Ramondo and Rodríguez-Clare, 2013) or knowledge (Keller and Yeaple, 2013) from the headquarters, or perhaps the costs of adapting production to a foreign and unfamiliar environment. An alternative cost of multinational activity features prominently in the recent work of Head and Mayer (2019), who argue that firms also incur adaptation costs when marketing goods in countries distinct from their origin country, regardless of where those goods are produced. They argue that this is an especially important feature of the car industry, and they estimate an industry equilibrium model in which car makers decide on the optimal sourcing of their car models taking into account where their headquarters are located, where they have assembly plants (which are fixed in their model), and where consumers are.…”
Section: Horizontal and Export-platform Fdimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, progress has been made by either exploiting survey data on the outward operations of multinational firms, and also by industry-specific studies relying on more granular data for specific sectors, such as the car industry data in Head and Mayer (2019).…”
Section: Taking Stockmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As an additional contribution, I provide new evidence on the distributional welfare gains of MNE production. Many of the most notable papers in the multinational production literature have focused on quantifying the welfare gains of MNE production by incorporating, among other factors, the interrelations between MNE production and trade, intermediate inputs, innovation, and comparative advantage (Alviarez, 2018;Arkolakis et al, 2018;Head and Mayer, 2018;Ramondo and Rodriguez-Clare, 2013;Tintelnot, 2017). My paper is the first to show how the baseline results found in the literature might be expected to change if we were to incorporate the channel of migration, which would significantly affect the distributional welfare gains of MNE production.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In these models, FDI entails not necessarily fixed/sunk costs but an efficiency loss compared to home production. Head and Mayer (2019) develop a model of multinational production with export platform combining elements of Melitz (2003) with Eaton and Kortum (2002), and perform simulations for two Brexit scenarios. In the pessimistic scenario, automotive production in the UK falls by 18%, while the reduction is around 4-10% under the optimistic scenario.…”
Section: Related Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%