Reports
Discussion Papers
No.893 Job Transfers along Global Value Chains and Their Determinants
by Yuning GAO, Meng LI, Bo MENG, Kimiko UNO
March 2026
ABSTRACT
This study first uses a world input-output model to trace job creation, absorption, and transfer along global value chains (GVCs) via three channels including the traditional trade, simple and complex GVCs trade according to whether and how cross-border production sharing happens. We find that jobs created via simple and complex GVCs have rapidly expanded, especially for the service sectors; more and more countries’ jobs generated via GVCs have tended to be highly dependent on China’s final demand. Further using a gravity model for 1995-2018 based on the OECD data, we show that the determinants of bilateral job transfers in the gravity model perform very differently via different channels of GVCs; the existence of complex GVCs provides opportunities for geographically distant countries with different languages and legal systems to create mutual jobs by their engagement in GVCs. These findings could help policymakers’ better understanding of the complex interdependency of the trade-related job creation among countries and potentially help better monitor and improve their GVC governance in more flexible and diversified ways.
Keywords: Global Value Chains, Inter-country Input-output Analysis, Job Creation, Job Transfer, Gravity Mode
JEL classification: C67, F14, F15, F16
PDF available at https://hdl.handle.net/2344/0002001769
Please note that discussion papers are works in various stages of progress and most have not been edited and proofread and may contain errors of fact or judgment. Revised versions of these papers may subsequently appear in more formal publication series. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s). The IDE does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included and accepts no responsibility for any consequences arising from its use.
