沉没成本与出口决策的实证模型

Mark J. Roberts, J. Tybout
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引用次数: 179

摘要

上世纪80年代的证据表明,出口对实际汇率变化的反应是不可预测的。最近的理论研究将此解释为与打入国外市场相关的沉没成本的结果。沉没成本包括包装成本、提升产品质量成本、建立营销渠道成本、积累需求源信息成本。作者使用微观面板数据来估计出口市场参与的动态离散选择模型,该模型源自克鲁格曼-鲍德温沉没成本滞后框架。他们将该模型应用于哥伦比亚制造工厂(1981- 1989)的数据,检验沉没进入成本的存在,并量化这些成本在解释出口模式中的重要性。计量经济学结果否定了沉没成本为零的假设。在控制了观察到的和未观察到的植物异质性来源的情况下,结果表明,先前的出口市场经验对出口概率有实质性影响,但其影响衰减得相当快。已经退出出口市场一年的工厂重新进入市场的成本大大低于首次出口的成本。然而,在退出出口市场一年之后,再进入成本与进入成本并无显著差异。工厂特征也与出口行为有关:企业拥有的大型老工厂比其他工厂更有可能出口。与宏观经济条件和沉没成本的变化相比,工厂成本和需求条件的变化对出口利润率的影响要小得多。在全球经济衰退期间,打入国外市场似乎尤其困难。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Empirical Model of Sunk Costs and the Decision to Export
Exports respond unpredictably to a change in real exchange rates, suggests evidence from the 1980s. Recent theoretical work explains this as a consequence of the sunk costs associated with breaking into foreign markets. Sunk costs include the cost of packaging, upgrading product quality, establishing marketing channels, and accumulating information on demand sources. The authors use micro panel data to estimate a dynamic discrete-choice model of participation in export markets, a model derived from the Krugman-Baldwin sunk-cost hysteresis framework. Applying the model to data on manufacturing plants in Colombia (1981-89), they test for the presence of sunk entry costs and quantify the importance of those costs in explaining export patterns. The econometric results reject the hypothesis that sunk costs are zero. The results, which control for both observed and unobserved sources of plant heterogeneity, indicate that prior export market experience has a substantial effect on the probability of exporting, but its effect depreciates fairly quickly. The reentry costs of plants that have been out of the export market for a year are substantially lower than the costs of a first-time exporter. After a year out of the export market, however, the reentry costs are not significantly different from the entry costs. Plant characteristics are also associated with export behavior: large old plants owned by corporations are more likely to export than other plants. Variations in plant-level cost and demand conditions have much less effect on the profitability of exporting than variations in macroeconomic conditions and sunk costs do. It appears especially difficult to break into foreign markets during periods of world recession.
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