Deborah Winkler
Deborah Winkler is a Research Associate with SCEPA and a Senior Consultant at the World Bank’s Trade & Competitiveness Global Practice. She is the author of Services Offshoring and Its Impact on the Labor Market, Outsourcing Economics: Global Value Chains in Capitalist Development (with W. Milberg) and Making Global Value Chains Work for Development (with D. Taglioni), as well as the editor of Making Foreign Direct Investment Work for Sub-Saharan Africa (with T. Farole). Her articles have appeared in World Development, the Journal of Economic Geography, World Economy, the Cambridge Journal of Economics, and edited volumes of the World Bank, the ILO-WTO and the Oxford Handbook Series. Dr Winkler received her PhD in economics from Hohenheim University, Germany
Papers Published in World Economics:
Offshoring and the Labour Share in Germany and US
Despite broad public concern with the effect of offshoring on inequality, there is scant research. The authors shift the focus to the effect of offshoring on the labour share in value added. Regression analysis for a sample of 14 OECD countries in 21 manufacturing sectors covering the period 1995 to 2008 reveals that the effects of offshoring on the labour share are negative. They also show that different policy regimes with regard to labour markets, education and innovation, and trade liberalisation mediate these effects whilst contrasting the experiences of Germany and the U.S. where the manufacturing labour share decline was particularly strong.
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Bias in the ‘Proportionality Assumption’ Used in the Measurement of Offshoring
Most studies of offshoring rely on a ‘proportionality assumption’ where every sector is assumed to import each material and service input in the same proportion as its economy-wide use. We assess the bias resulting from this assumption. Since Germany collects imported inputs directly, we are able to compare the direct and proxy measures, where the proxy is constructed with the proportionality assumption. The proxy fails to accurately capture the variation in services offshoring intensity because – as a result of the proportionality assumption – it is strongly influenced by the variation in demand for domestic inputs. Estimation of the effect of offshoring on labour demand for 35 manufacturing sectors in Germany over 1995–2006 shows that the direct and proxy-based measures of services offshoring give very different results. The implication goes beyond the case of Germany: researchers must be cautious about drawing policy conclusions from estimates using the proxy of offshoring.
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