posted on 2024-08-27, 10:40authored byShohei Tokito, Fumiya Nagashima, Tesshu Hanaka
<p>Participation in global value chains (GVCs) can help countries achieve productivity growth and increase the domestic value added (DVA) through the allocation of production processes. Therefore, identifying the factors within the GVC (value added productivity, export share, backward and forward linkage of them, and economic scale) that help countries reveals key considerations in economic policy-making for DVA production contribution. We developed a new structural decomposition analysis that decomposes time-series changes of export-related DVA into five effects and empirically analysed Japan’s economy between 2000–2014. The results show that the domestic supply chain and share of intermediate export goods negatively impacted Japan’s DVA. We found that Japan’s exports triggered expansion in the downstream markets of emerging nations, like China, and high-technology industries are key to GVC growth.</p>
Funding
With regards to funding, this research was partially supported by the ESPEC Foundation for Global Environment Research and Technology (Charitable Trust), the Kurata Grants from The Hitachi Global Foundation, and the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research [grant number 20H00651, grant number 20K20025, 20H00081 and grant number 21K13277].