Adapting our earlier model of multinationals, we address policy issues involving wages and labor skills. Multinational firms may arise endogenously, exporting their firm-specific knowledge capital to foreign production facilities, and geographically fragmenting production into skilled and unskilled-labor-intensive activities. Multinationals thus alter the nature of trade, from trade in goods (produced with both skilled and unskilled labor) to trade in skilled-labor-intensive producer services. Results shed light on several policy questions. First, multinationals increase the skilled/unskilled wage gap in the high income country and, under some circumstances, in the low income country as well. Second, there is a sense in which multinationals...
We develop a simple model of multinational firms, in which firms engage in production abroad to take...
The article analyses the effects of multinational business operations in a host economy under both r...
This paper studies how cross-country di¤erences in labor market institutions shape the pat-tern of i...
Adapting our earlier model of multinationals, we address policy issues involving wages and labor ski...
We construct a model of international trade and multinational production (MP) to examine the impact ...
The observation of an increase in the ratio of skilled to unskilled wages in the high-income countri...
We formulate a two-country model with monopolistic competition and heterogeneous firms to reconsider...
Evidence shows that most foreign direct investment (FDI) flows from developed to developed countries...
This paper assesses the evidence regarding the effects of multinational production on wages and work...
Multinational firms can access global talent in two ways: by employing migrants in their home countr...
This paper investigates the effects of multinational firm activity on wage inequa lity in both the h...
This paper studies how cross-country di¤erences in labor market institutions shape the pat-tern of i...
In developing countries, trade is increasingly associated with greater returns to high-skilled labor...
The increase in foreign direct investments raises concerns about labor market consequences in many c...
This paper investigates the effects of multinational corporations on labor standards. We argue that ...
We develop a simple model of multinational firms, in which firms engage in production abroad to take...
The article analyses the effects of multinational business operations in a host economy under both r...
This paper studies how cross-country di¤erences in labor market institutions shape the pat-tern of i...
Adapting our earlier model of multinationals, we address policy issues involving wages and labor ski...
We construct a model of international trade and multinational production (MP) to examine the impact ...
The observation of an increase in the ratio of skilled to unskilled wages in the high-income countri...
We formulate a two-country model with monopolistic competition and heterogeneous firms to reconsider...
Evidence shows that most foreign direct investment (FDI) flows from developed to developed countries...
This paper assesses the evidence regarding the effects of multinational production on wages and work...
Multinational firms can access global talent in two ways: by employing migrants in their home countr...
This paper investigates the effects of multinational firm activity on wage inequa lity in both the h...
This paper studies how cross-country di¤erences in labor market institutions shape the pat-tern of i...
In developing countries, trade is increasingly associated with greater returns to high-skilled labor...
The increase in foreign direct investments raises concerns about labor market consequences in many c...
This paper investigates the effects of multinational corporations on labor standards. We argue that ...
We develop a simple model of multinational firms, in which firms engage in production abroad to take...
The article analyses the effects of multinational business operations in a host economy under both r...
This paper studies how cross-country di¤erences in labor market institutions shape the pat-tern of i...