Assessing the Performance of Offshore Firms in Tunisia

This paper examines the performance of offshore firms in Tunisia for the period 2002~2014. Using firm-level data, we analyze the impact of offshoring on turnover, productivity, wages and firm survival. Overall, offshore firms perform better with respect to all of these indicators. However, in the sp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of economic integration 2019, 34(2), , pp.280-307
Hauptverfasser: Baghdadi, Leila, Kheder, Sonia Ben, Arouri, Hassen
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper examines the performance of offshore firms in Tunisia for the period 2002~2014. Using firm-level data, we analyze the impact of offshoring on turnover, productivity, wages and firm survival. Overall, offshore firms perform better with respect to all of these indicators. However, in the specific case of offshore firms that export and import at the same time, called two-way offshoring, performance is weaker across the board compared to their onshore counterparts. Lower productivity of offshore firms engaged in both exporting and importing suggests that these firms are low performers and that they self-select the offshore regime to reduce their fixed costs associated with exporting. The survival analysis highlights an increased probability that these types of firms will exit the market once tariffs and tax exemption privileges end, usually after 10 years. Thus, incentives provided in the Tunisian Investment Code are primarily attracting firms in the lower rungs of global value chains.
ISSN:1225-651X
1976-5525
DOI:10.11130/jei.2019.34.2.280