Multinational Supply Chains
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 7, 2022 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM (EST)
- Chair: Cecile Gaubert, University of California-Berkeley
Global Giants and Local Stars: How Changes in Brand Ownership Affect Competition
Abstract
We assess the consequences for consumers in 76 countries of multinational acquisitions in beer and spirits. Outcomes depend on how changes in ownership affect markups versus efficiency. We find that owner fixed effects contribute very little to the performance of brands. On average, foreign ownership tends to raise costs and lower appeal. Using the estimated model, we simulate the consequences of counterfactual national merger regulation. The US beer price index would have been 4–7% higher without divestitures. Up to 30% savings could have been obtained in LatinAmerica by emulating the pro-competition policies of the US and EU.
Responsible Sourcing? Theory and Evidence From Costa Rica
Abstract
In recent years the adoption of Responsible Sourcing (RS) requirements by multinational enterprises (MNEs) has become widespread. They impose minimum standards on wages, benefits, working conditions and other production practices at their suppliers. Despite the growth in RS, there has been relatively little theoretical work or empirical evidence on the economic consequences. In particular, we know little about the effectiveness of RS to benefit firms and workers in developing countries. To guide the analysis, we develop a quantitative general equilibrium model designed to study the incidence of RS requirements on suppliers and workers in sourcing origin countries. We derive comparative statics and welfare expressions under different modeling assumptions and decompose the competing forces. We then build a new database covering the near-universe of RS rollouts by more than 400 MNEs sourcing in Costa Rica starting in 2009, and combine it with firm-to-firm transaction records and employer-employee matched administrative microdata for all Costa-Rican firms. Guided by model predictions, we provide empirical evidence on the effects of RS rollouts on suppliers and workers and use them to discriminate between different variants of our theory. Finally, we combine empirical evidence and microdata to calibrate the model and quantify the welfare implications of RS and related policy counterfactuals.Discussant(s)
Lorenzo Caliendo
,
Yale University
Jan De Loecker
,
KU Leuven
Felix Tintelnot
,
University of Chicago
JEL Classifications
- F2 - International Factor Movements and International Business