2021
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3919891
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Exploring Trade and Technological linkages: Evidence from India’s Sectoral GVC Participation

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The efficiency and effectiveness of international trade through sea depend on infrastructure and operational management capabilities (Arora and Siddiqui 2022). Furthermore, it is noted that the internal logistics infrastructure for Spanish areas and the LPI of the importing nations have a beneficial impact on trade.…”
Section: Logistics and Supply Chain Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The efficiency and effectiveness of international trade through sea depend on infrastructure and operational management capabilities (Arora and Siddiqui 2022). Furthermore, it is noted that the internal logistics infrastructure for Spanish areas and the LPI of the importing nations have a beneficial impact on trade.…”
Section: Logistics and Supply Chain Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Robotization impacts labor by increasing upstream and positive global value chain integration [4], which in turn reduces worker savings and social investment and ultimately hinders economic growth [5]. Industrial robot applications reduce the relative advantage of developing countries in traditionally labor-intensive manufacturing, making the advantage of low-cost labor less attractive, reducing offshoring activities in developed countries, and weakening technological connections in traditional global value chains [6], which will lead to the exclusion of developing countries from GVC and hinder their development [7]. The increased density of industrial robots would make multinational companies more efficient in domestic production than in production abroad [8], triggering the return and re-offshoring of production and weakening the overall importance of GVC [9].…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This indicates that the impact of industrial robots is more effective in developing countries, and industrial robot application can more effectively promote developing countries to achieve technological catch-up and reduce the development gap. The application of industrial robots in developing countries can reduce labor costs, reduce labor risks, improve product quality, support the learning and absorption of advanced international technologies, and enhance their own scientific and technological research capabilities through technological cooperation with developed countries, giving rise to the advantage of backwardness and thus more quickly upgrading their GVC status [6].…”
Section: Heterogeneitymentioning
confidence: 99%