Publication: Impact of Export Destinations on Firm Performance
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Date
2014-01
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Published
2014-01
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Abstract
This paper evaluates the role of export destinations on productivity, employment, and wages of Turkish firms by comparing the performance of firms that export to low-income destinations and high-income destinations with firms that do not export. A combination of propensity score matching and difference-in-differences methods are employed on a rich set of firm observables, including sector, region, employment, total factor productivity (TFP), capital intensity, wages, support from government, ownership, and the research and development intensity of firms. Four sets of findings emerge from the analysis: i) Export entry has a positive causal effect on firm TFP and employment and this effect is strengthened as a firm continues to export. ii) In contrast, export entry has a moderate wage effect that emerges only with a lag. iii) Unlike exporting to high-income destinations, exporting to low-income destinations does not result in significantly higher firm TFP and wages. iv) The employment effect of exporting to low-income destinations is comparable to that of exporting to high-income destinations.
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“Cebeci, Tolga. 2014. Impact of Export Destinations on Firm Performance. Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6743. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16819 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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