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Agglomeration Economies and Location Choices by Foreign Firms in Vietnam. Dinh Thi Thanh Binh University of Trento, Italy. Theories of localization (1/2). Agglomeration economies: positive externalities that stem from the geographic clustering of industries. 3 externalities (Marshall, 1920):
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Agglomeration Economies and Location Choices by Foreign Firms in Vietnam Dinh Thi Thanh Binh University of Trento, Italy
Theories of localization (1/2) • Agglomeration economies: positive externalities that stem from the geographic clustering of industries. • 3 externalities (Marshall, 1920): • Technological spillovers • A pooled market for workers with specialized skills • A pooled market of specialized intermediate inputs • Empirical studies: foreign firms are likely near other firms in the same industry or from the same country of origin (Head et al., 1995; Crozet et al. 2004; Guimaraes and Figueiredo, 2000).
Theories of localization (2/2) • However, most papers neglect firm heterogeneity and competition among firms. • Firms are not only receivers but also sources of knowledge. • They therefore choose locations to gain exposure to others’ localized knowledge while reducing leakage of their own knowledge to competitors. • Shaver and Flyer (2000); Alcacer & Chung (2007): • Large foreign firms try to locate away from their competitors. • Technologically advanced firms choose only location with high levels of academic activity and avoid locations with industry activity to distance themselves from competitors.
Aims of the study • The study tests three hypotheses that aim to verify the existence of agglomeration economies in location choices by foreign firms in Vietnam: • Hypothesis 1: the greater the number of foreign firms already established in a province, the more likely new foreign investors are to invest in that province. • Hypothesis 2: the greater the number of domestic firms and foreign firms in a specific industry already located in a province, the more likely new foreign investors in that industry are to locate in that province. • Hypothesis 3: the greater the number of foreign firms from a specific country already located in a province, the more likely new foreign investors from that country are to locate in that province.
The geographical distribution of foreign firms in Vietnam 2000-2005 Source: The GSO’s survey on firms
Data sources • The yearly survey of enterprises operating in Vietnam yearly conducted by General Statistics Office of Vietnam (GSO) since 2000. • All foreign firms in all 64 provinces and cities in Vietnam with detailed information about each foreign firm. • Obtain 568 new foreign firms in 2005 by using tax code and the year of operation. • The stock numbers of foreign investors up to 2004 are used to form the agglomerations variables. • Province’s characteristics: Vietnam Statistical Yearbooks
Empirical results Negative binomial model (****p-value<0.005, ** p-value < 0.05)
Conditional logit model(McFadden,1974) • The investor i, if it locates in province j, will derive an expected profit of Πij: • The investor i prefers the location j if: k ≠ j, and j, k € M. • The probability of choosing the location j is thus: k ≠ j. • The probability that i yields the highest profitability when choosing j among the choice set M is : • α: the characteristics of provinces • X: agglomeration variables • ε: an investment location specific random disturbance.
Empirical resultsConditional logit model (****p-value<0.005, *** p-value < 0.01)
Conclusions • New foreign investors are likely to locate their firms near other foreign firms. • They prefer to locate near foreign firms in the same industries and from the same countries of origin. • Competition among provinces in FDI attraction. • Location of Vietnamese firms has no effect on location decisions by foreign firms in the same industries. Policy Implication • Industrial zones • The case of Binh Duong province in Vietnam