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Full Description
Value chain trade has challenged economic implications of conventional trade statistics and transformed bilateral trade relationships into multilaterals. Conventional trade statistics exaggerate trade volumes and bilateral trade imbalances. It is imperative to measure trade in value-added and examine trade relations in the context of global value chains. This book is a collection of research papers on new approaches to measure trade in value added and the role of global value chains in modern international trade. It introduces the input output method for measuring trade and a direct approach for measuring the domestic value added of the People's Republic of China — the center of global assembly. In addition, it shows how to analyze trade relations in the context of global value chains.
Contents
Introduction (Yuqing Xing); Global Value Chains: Implications for Trade Statistics and Trade Policy (Christophe Degain and Andreas Maurer); OECD Inter-Country Input-Output Model and Policy implications (Norihiko Yamano); Measuring the Domestic Value Added of PRC's Exports: A Direct Approach (Yuqing Xing); An Alternative Measurement for International Fragmentation of Production Process: An International Input-Output Approach (Satoshi Inomata); Share of Imports and Commodities in US Consumption and Investment (Galina Hale and Bart Hobijn); Domestic Value Chains in PRC and their Linkages with the Global Economy (Bo Meng); The "Fox-Apple" Partnership in the Global Value Chain: How Did FDI and Contract Manufacturing Reshape the Landscape of the Electronics Industry? (Guoyong Liang);