Abstract
We build a dynamic trade model to study how international unbundling of production and the emergence of global supply chains affect the world income distribution. We consider a world where countries only differ in their productivity. The level of productivity determines the number of varieties a country produces. To manufacture each variety a bundle of intermediates, which require capital and labor in different proportions, needs to be assembled. We characterize two trade regimes: (i) trade only in varieties and (ii) trade in both varieties and intermediates (unbundling). We show that unbundling of production generates income divergence among ex-ante identical countries (symmetry breaking). With heterogeneous countries, it increases top-bottom inequality and it has non-monotonic effects on the world income distribution (it reduces relatively more the income share of middle-productivity countries). We also show that when the South joins the global supply chain, the income share of all northern and the most productive southern countries increase, at the expense of the least productive countries. In addition, we find that the effect of a labor-saving technology, computerization, depends on the trade regime. Without unbundling, computerization has no effect on the world income distribution. With unbundling, computerization raises world inequality. Finally, we show that technology diffusion leads to income convergence under both trade regimes. However, with unbundling of production more low-productivity countries benefit from technological catch-up.
Keywords
World Income Distribution; Symmetry Breaking; Global Supply Chains;
JEL codes
- F12: Models of Trade with Imperfect Competition and Scale Economies • Fragmentation
- F43: Economic Growth of Open Economies
- O11: Macroeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
- O19: International Linkages to Development • Role of International Organizations
- O40: General
Reference
Sergi Basco, and Marti Mestieri, “The World Income Distribution: The Effects of International Unbundling of Production”, TSE Working Paper, n. 14-531, October 2014, revised November 2014.