Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
About us FEB Research / FEB FEB Research News News / FEB

Stagnating global trade partly caused by decreased fragmentation of production chains

25 November 2016
Marcel Timmer

New research by University of Groningen economists Marcel Timmer, Bart Los and Gaaitzen de Vries together with their colleague Robert Stehrer from the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies Globalization reveals that globalization has had its heyday. In a study that has just been published they provide insights into the malaise in global trade. They conclude that international production chains ceased being fragmented in 2011. They recently presented their results to the International Monetary Fund.

Timmer, Professor of Economic Growth and Development, sees a fundamental change in the relationship between trade and global production processes. Ever fewer imports are needed per dollar of production, he explains in Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad . The ratio of global revenue that comprises the import of goods and services has gradually dropped since 2011, whereas it rapidly increased before the crisis.

China less dependent on imports

According to Timmer, one of the cornerstones of globalization is under threat: the international fragmentation of production chains. This fragmentation, which means that different production phases take place in different countries, increased in the 1990s and first decade of this century, but stopped increasing in 2011.

This is mainly due to China, for a long time the main driver of growth in global trade. Chinese production has become less dependent on imports because technological advances have enabled the country to produce more goods itself. And the Chinese are getting richer, which means their consumption is shifting from goods to services, which are less trade-intensive.

More information

Videos on Marcel Timmer’s research

URL FEB
AACSB EQUIS logos
Last modified:29 February 2024 10.02 a.m.
View this page in: Nederlands

More news

  • 29 April 2024

    Tactile sensors

    Every two weeks, UG Makers puts the spotlight on a researcher who has created something tangible, ranging from homemade measuring equipment for academic research to small or larger products that can change our daily lives. That is how UG...

  • 29 April 2024

    Royal Decoration awarded to Gerard van den Berg

    The Faculty of Economics and Business is very proud to announce that Professor Gerard van den Berg has been appointed Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau. The decoration was presented to him by Mayor Koen Schuiling of the Municipality of...

  • 29 April 2024

    Guido Berends and Hylke Dijkstra win FEB Research Awards 2023

    The awards for best PhD thesis and best graduate of the research master were presented at the annual PhD conference held on April 18. Guido Berends won the Best PhD Thesis Award 2023 and Hylke Dijkstra won the Research Master Graduate Award 2023.