“…Thanks to the productivity-enhancing effect of offshoring, even factors of production whose tasks are offshored can benefit from the international delocalization of production (Grossman and Rossi-Hansberg, 2008). The empirical evidence broadly supports this view (Görg et al, 2008;Daveri and Jona-Lasinio, 2008;Hijzen et al, 2010;Jabbour, 2010). However, higher productivity comes at the cost of higher demand elasticities for production workers (Sensen, 2010), increasing job instability (Geishecker, 2008;Lo Turco et al, 2013), broadening wage inequality due to the increase in the relative demand for skilled workers (Feenstra andHanson, 1996,1999;Broccolini et al, 2011), and higher unemployment in presence of imperfect intersectoral labor mobility (Mitra and Ranjan, 2010).…”