4.5 Article

Are global value chains merely global? The case of Chinese Provinces in global value chains

Journal

APPLIED ECONOMICS
Volume 53, Issue 32, Pages 3778-3794

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2021.1886236

Keywords

Global value chains; geographical distribution; changing mechanism; trans-national inter-regional input-output model

Categories

Funding

  1. Chinese National Funding of Social Sciences [18VSJ055]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71673083]

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This study extends the measurement of the global value chain decomposition framework to the sub-national regional level, exploring data from 30 Chinese provinces. It finds that coastal provinces show a more significant decline in nationalization, regionalization, and globalization compared to inland provinces, while the level of regionalization weakening is generally the same across all provinces. In terms of production-sharing activities, complex GVC embeddedness is the main mode for Chinese provinces but shows signs of gradual weakening over time, particularly in the coastal regions.
We extend the measure of the global value chain (GVC) decomposition framework to the sub-national regional level based on a new Trans-national Inter-regional Input-Output (TIIO) table , which covers 30 Chinese provinces for 2007 and 2012. We answer the question whether fragmentation of GVCs is mainly national, regional or merely global by deriving the geographical distribution by province and the trends related to the production chain of a particular final good. Depending on whether the intermediate inputs cross borders for production or not, we further divide these production activities into GVC or non-GVC activities and identify the changing mechanism from the perspective of simple and complex GVC activities. We find that coastal provinces show a higher decline in nationalization compared to inland provinces. The degree of regionalization weakening of each province is generally the same, which is more evident in coastal provinces. Additionally, coastal provinces show a more significant decline of globalization compared to inland provinces. Regarding border crossing production-sharing activities, complex GVC embeddedness is the main mode of Chinese provinces. They, however, show signs of gradual weakening over time. This is more pronounced in the dynamic evolution of regionalization and globalization in coastal provinces.

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