2002
DOI: 10.1111/1467-937x.00205
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Trade Liberalization, Exit, and Productivity Improvements: Evidence from Chilean Plants

Abstract: This paper empirically investigates the effects of liberalized trade on plant productivity in the case of Chile. Chile presents an interesting setting to study this relationship since it underwent a massive trade liberalization that significantly exposed its plants to competition from abroad during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Methodologically, I approach this question in two steps. In the first step, I estimate a production function to obtain a measure of plant productivity. I estimate the production funct… Show more

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Cited by 1,447 publications
(1,235 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…i.e., the spillover from the R&D carried out in OECD countries. 3 This is analogous to the effect of trade liberalization enhancing domestic firms' productivity reported for Chilean firms by Pavcnik (2002). technology gap between foreign and domestic firms is large, such positive effect can be offset by the effect of FIEs reducing domestic firms' sales thus forcing them to operate with reduced production scale.…”
Section: Horizontal or Vertical Spillover?mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…i.e., the spillover from the R&D carried out in OECD countries. 3 This is analogous to the effect of trade liberalization enhancing domestic firms' productivity reported for Chilean firms by Pavcnik (2002). technology gap between foreign and domestic firms is large, such positive effect can be offset by the effect of FIEs reducing domestic firms' sales thus forcing them to operate with reduced production scale.…”
Section: Horizontal or Vertical Spillover?mentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Ignoring this selection mechanism may bias estimates of productivity. This approach has recently been used to analyze the impact of trade liberalization on plant productivity in Chile by Pavcnik (2002) and to analyze the effect of FDI on productivity of domestic firms (Keller and Yeaple, 2003).…”
Section: Productivity Dynamics and Export Statusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To make our TFP estimates comparable across industries, we compute a productivity index (Pavcnik (2002), Aw, et. al (2001)) as follows: We consider 1992 to be the base year for which we calculate the mean TFP estimate by industry group.…”
Section: Estimating Total Factor Productivitymentioning
confidence: 99%