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Trade Orientation and Mutual Productivity Spillovers between Foreign
and Local Firms in China
Yingqi Wei
University of Sheffield, U.K.
Xiaming Liu
University of London, U.K.
Chengang Wang
Bradford University, U.K.
ABSTRACT
This paper argues that multinational firms can benefit from indigenous
knowledge diffusion in a host developing country so that there can be
two-way productivity spillovers between foreign and local firms even in
the developing world. This new argument is confirmed by a very large
firm-level data set from the Chinese manufacturing sector. After
grouping firms based on their trade orientation, we find that foreign
firms have a positive impact on local-market-oriented Chinese firms.
When the degree of foreign presence is sufficiently high, there will be
negative productivity effects on export-oriented Chinese firms. On the
other hand, local Chinese firms have a positive impact on export-oriented
foreign invested firms. After dividing foreign firms according to their
sources, we find that the beneficial spillovers between OECD and local
Chinese firms are much greater than those between Hong Kong/Macao/Taiwan
and local Chinese firms.
Key Words: Foreign Direct Investment, Indigenous Knowledge,
Export-Oriented, Local-Market-Oriented, Mutual Productivity Spillovers |
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