GLOBAL AND LOCAL SUBCONTRACTING - SPACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE ORGANIZATION OF APPAREL PRODUCTION

Citation
B. Christerson et Rp. Appelbaum, GLOBAL AND LOCAL SUBCONTRACTING - SPACE, ETHNICITY, AND THE ORGANIZATION OF APPAREL PRODUCTION, World development, 23(8), 1995, pp. 1363-1374
Citations number
68
Categorie Soggetti
Planning & Development",Economics
Journal title
ISSN journal
0305750X
Volume
23
Issue
8
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1363 - 1374
Database
ISI
SICI code
0305-750X(1995)23:8<1363:GALS-S>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Labor-intensive apparel production has shifted to low-wage Asian natio ns, yet continues to flourish in the United States and other high-wage areas. This paper explains this apparent contradiction by concluding that in addition to labor costs, firm size, ethnicity, market strategy , and trade regulations powerfully affect the location of apparel prod uction. Large firms are more able to disperse production globally than small firms, US-based firms owned by ethnic Asians are more likely to produce in Asian factories than firms of other ethnicities, and firms producing for rapidly changing fashion markets are less likely to pro duce offshore than firms producing less fashion-intensive products. Fi nally, trade restrictions powerfully affect the location of production , albeit in ways different than intended by policy makers.