1 / 23

Vertical FDI, outsourcing and contracts Lessons 5 and 6

Vertical FDI, outsourcing and contracts Lessons 5 and 6. Giorgio Barba Navaretti Gargnano, June, 11-14 2006. The issue. Once the decision to produce in a foreign country has been taken, how is foreign production carried out? Wholly owned subsidiary External contractual relationship

kert
Download Presentation

Vertical FDI, outsourcing and contracts Lessons 5 and 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vertical FDI, outsourcing and contractsLessons 5 and 6 Giorgio Barba Navaretti Gargnano, June, 11-14 2006

  2. The issue • Once the decision to produce in a foreign country has been taken, how is foreign production carried out? • Wholly owned subsidiary • External contractual relationship • e.g. why McDonald’s franchises and Gap owns?

  3. The broad trade off TRADE OFF: • Costs of setting up own facilities: • Fixed costs • Lack of info • Lack of knowledge of the local market • Inefficient scale • Costs of an external agreement: • Contractual failures

  4. Summary of the costs of external transactions

  5. Types of contractual failures: hold-up • Type of action: Carrying out one stage of production • Conditions: • Incomplete contracts: not all contingencies taken into account • Product specificity: products with specific characteristics produced on commission for principal • Problem: • High risk of re-negotiation • Supplier underinvests • Solution: • Share rents with local agent • internalise

  6. Types of contractual failures: Agency • Type of action: Carrying out one stage of production • Conditions: • Incomplete information: the actions of local agents cannot be observed by the principal • Incomplete information: conditions of the local market cannot be observed by the principal • Problem: • Agent minimises effort (Moral Hazard) • Agent withholds information on the state of the market (Adverse selection) • Solution: • Share rents with local agent • internalise

  7. Types of contractual failures: Dissipation of intangible assets • Type of action: Transferring knowledge or goodwill • Conditions: • Asset too difficult to transfer • Asset too easy to transfer • Limited protection of intellectual property rights • Problem: • Costly transfer of knowledge • Dissipation of assets: agent acquires knowledge and starts production on his own • Solution: • Share rents with local agent • internalise

  8. General setting • Production involves two activities, x and y • Revenue is given by R(x,y) and it is an increasing and concave function of x and y • The MNE (M) has an advantage in x (e.g R&D, components etc.): • Unit cost if undertaken by the MNE: c • Unit cost if undertaken by another firm: gc with g>1 • The local firm (L) has an advantage in y: • Unit cost if undertaken by L: a • Unit cost if undertaken by M: aa with a>1

  9. Efficient allocation of resources • No contractual problem: M carries out x and outsources y to L • Centralised problem: Choose x and y so as to maximize joint profits: . , . F.O.C.: Decentralised problem: M sells x to L at price q: Efficient allocation of resources if M and L price takers and q=c

  10. Hold up: setting • Investments are relation specific: • x and y can be sold outside the relationship at: • Contracts are not complete: • =>incentive to engage in opportunistic behaviour

  11. Hold up Internalised solution: wholly owned subsidiary Max: FOC: , . External solution: outsourcing Profits of M: FOC of M: Profits of L: FOC of L:

  12. Hold up special case with the optimised value of revenue is: If production is internalised input costs are: and profits: If production is outsourced input costs are: and profits:

  13. Hold up special case Parameter values:  = 0.5, a = c = 1, ra = rc = 0.5, α = 2 and  = 0.8

  14. Hold up and industry equilibrium in outsourcing • What happens when we move away from bilateral relations? • What determines the number of firms in equilibrium (multinationals and local contractors)? • Why in reality we do observe both outsourcers and internalizers? • What determines the number of ‘outsourcers’ vs. the number of ‘internalizers’ (multinational are heterogeneous)? • How does the hold-up enter into this picture? • Grossman and Helpman (2002, 2003), Antras (2004) and Antras and Helpman (2004)

  15. Trade off • Benefits from outsourcing • reduces marginal costs and creates competitive pressure on non outsourcers (and reduces margins from further outsourcing) • Costs of outsourcers: • matching between outsourcers and local firms • Hold up

  16. Market for multinational products • Dixit Stiglitz model of monopolistic competition: • n firms and varieties, • s>1 is the elasticity of substitution between varieties • Pk and Rk respectively price and revenues earned by kth variety • G is the price index and E total expenditure:

  17. Profits of the MNE under outsourcing and internalization • MNEs can internalize (I) or outsource (O). • r is the share of MNEs that outsource • Prices have a constant mark up (s-1)/s and profits are a constant fraction of revenues • => PI=(RI/s) and Po=(Ro/s) • Profits in the two regimes are given by:

  18. Matching of multinationals and local component manufacturers

  19. Features of matching • Modification costs incurred by component manufacturers (m) at a distance z away from their location: mz • Each component manufatcurers can serve 2nz0 multinationals where z0 is the maximum profitable distance they can cater to • Proportion of multinationals that outsource: r = 2mz0

  20. Determining z0, m and n Define maximum distance that can be catered by component manufacturers without incurring losses: Define number of component manufatcurers m: Define number of multinationals n

  21. Describing the equilibrium

  22. Zero profits lines for component producers Zero profits line for manufacturers

  23. Summing up • It is possible that only a fraction of the multinationals will outsource • This fraction will depend on exogenous parameters like fixed entry costs Fm and Fn and the modification cost m

More Related