Publication Type
Book Chapter
Version
submittedVersion
Publication Date
9-2021
Abstract
This chapter analyses the participation of Singapore in the global value chains (GVC): how much of its gross exports are GVC-related trade; how downstream it is; and which countries are its key upstream and downstream trade partners. The analysis is carried out both at the country aggregate level and at the sector level. New formulas are proposed in the gross export decomposition framework of Koopman, Wang and Wei (2014) and Borin and Mancini (2017), to characterise a country/industry’s downstreamness in the GVC and the importance of each trade partner in its backward/forward linkages. Singapore started off with a very high level of GVC trade in 1995, but its unique status has been diluted over the years. In the last two decades, East Asian countries (such as Taiwan and Korea) have become equally, if not more, active players in the GVCs. In contrast with Japan and the United States, Singapore is located at the lower end of the GVC (with a similar downstreamness index as China). Malaysia and the United States were Singapore’s top two upstream/downstream partners in 1995; however, by 2011, China had taken up substantially more weight and replaced the US’s status.
Keywords
global value chains, downstream, upstream, Singapore, China
Discipline
Asian Studies | International Economics
Research Areas
International Economics
Publication
The Singapore economy: Dynamism and inclusion
Editor
Hoon Hian Teck
First Page
58
Last Page
117
ISBN
9780429266584
Identifier
10.4324/9780429266584-4
Publisher
Routledge
City or Country
London
Citation
1
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429266584-4