What Explains the International Location of the Clothing Industry?
Abstract
The clothing sector has been a driver of diversification and growth for countries that have graduated into middle income. Using a partial adjustment panel data model, this study tries to explain the international location of clothing production based on a combination of variables suggested by the Heckscher-Ohlin theory and by New Economic Geography theory. Our Blundell-Bond system estimator results show that closeness to intermediates such as low-cost labor and textile production has a positive effect on clothing production. Factor endowment and closeness to the world market have inversed U-shaped effects. This is expected, because above a certain level several other sectors benefit even more from closeness and factor endowments, driving resources away from the clothing industry.
University
University of Gothenburg. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2008-02-21Author
Tengstam, Sven
Keywords
Clothing Industry
New Economic Geography
Comparative Advantages
Industrial Agglomeration
JEL: F12; F13; L13; L67; R12; R3
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
290
Language
eng