TY - UNPB
T1 - Functional specialisation in EU value chains
T2 - methods for identifying EU countries' roles in international production networks
AU - Kordalska, Aleksandra
AU - Olczyk, Magdalena
AU - Stöllinger, Roman
AU - Zavarska, Zuzana
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Geographically dispersed production networks have allowed countries to specialise in different functions of the value chain. By making use of two methodologies for quantifying the magnitude of functional specialisation - one based on trade flows and one based on FDI flows - detailed profiles of the functional specialisations of EU member states are identified. The analyses are conducted at the country, industry and regional level. In line with the existing literature, they reveal that EU-CEE countries are predominantly specialised in the fabrication stage, that is, they serve as 'factory economies', while the Western EU countries are mainly performing knowledge-intensive pre-fabrication activities - a characteristic of 'headquarter economies'. This dualism within the EU is confirmed by a cluster analysis. While functional specialisation patterns tend to be persistent, especially in the fabrication stage, there are also some signs of functional diversification in EU-CEE countries in more recent years. Still, these functional changes remain limited to a few industries. The dichotomy of factory and headquarter economies is also clearly discernible at the regional level. However, the fact that in most EU countries - mainly in the capital regions - there are some headquarter-type regions implies that a complete functional 'lock-in' in fabrication is less likely than suggested by the country-level patterns. Hence, while the results point towards major difficulties of functional diversification beyond the fabrication stage in the EU-CEE countries and regions, there are also several promising elements and trends discernible, in particular at the industry and the regional level
AB - Geographically dispersed production networks have allowed countries to specialise in different functions of the value chain. By making use of two methodologies for quantifying the magnitude of functional specialisation - one based on trade flows and one based on FDI flows - detailed profiles of the functional specialisations of EU member states are identified. The analyses are conducted at the country, industry and regional level. In line with the existing literature, they reveal that EU-CEE countries are predominantly specialised in the fabrication stage, that is, they serve as 'factory economies', while the Western EU countries are mainly performing knowledge-intensive pre-fabrication activities - a characteristic of 'headquarter economies'. This dualism within the EU is confirmed by a cluster analysis. While functional specialisation patterns tend to be persistent, especially in the fabrication stage, there are also some signs of functional diversification in EU-CEE countries in more recent years. Still, these functional changes remain limited to a few industries. The dichotomy of factory and headquarter economies is also clearly discernible at the regional level. However, the fact that in most EU countries - mainly in the capital regions - there are some headquarter-type regions implies that a complete functional 'lock-in' in fabrication is less likely than suggested by the country-level patterns. Hence, while the results point towards major difficulties of functional diversification beyond the fabrication stage in the EU-CEE countries and regions, there are also several promising elements and trends discernible, in particular at the industry and the regional level
KW - global value chains
KW - greenfield FDI
KW - factory economy
KW - smile curve
KW - functional specialisation
M3 - Working Paper/Preprint
T3 - wiiw Research Report
BT - Functional specialisation in EU value chains
PB - Wiener Institut für Internationale Wirtschaftsvergleiche (wiiw)
CY - Wien
ER -