The Impact of Exporting: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Egypt
Key Finding Summary
Egyptian carpet makers who were offered the opportunity to export reported profits that were 15-25 percent higher than firms not offered export contracts. Exporting firms also displayed gradual improvements in output quality, indicating that through exporting firms, small business owners can learn new skills and techniques and become more productive.
Abstract
Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are often important parts of developing country economies, but many programs designed to spur their growth have been unsuccessful. In Egypt, researchers offered small-scale rug manufacturers the opportunity to export to high-income countries. They found that SMEs offered export opportunities increased both their profits and product quality relative to firms in a comparison group.
Policy Issue
In developing countries, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) often employ a substantial portion of the population 1 and many of these firms participate in government-sponsored trade-facilitation programs2. These initiatives are based on the assumption that increased export opportunities will spur SME growth and productivity. Currently, however, there is a lack of rigorous evidence evaluating if and how access to export markets impacts SMEs. Answers to these questions could assist governments and donor organizations in tailoring specific policies and programs to improve local economies.
Context of the Evaluation
Details of the Intervention
Results and Policy Lessons
Profits and productivity: Among SMEs offered the opportunity to export, operating profits increased 16 to 26 percent relative to comparison group firms. The higher-quality rugs demanded by foreign retailers were more expensive and time-intensive to make, but the resulting increased purchase price was more than enough to offset costlier production. This increase in profits, thus, came in tandem with increases in quality, as well as declines in output per hour.
Learning by exporting: Evidence from this evaluation suggests that the quality upgrades may have been a result of “learning by exporting.” When the first orders arrived, productivity declined, but then rose steadily as production continued. In the researchers’ “quality lab,” the rug quality produced by treatment group SMEs was higher across every dimension measured. Additionally, communication logbooks confirmed that most improvements took place along dimensions discussed between buyers and sellers, suggesting that feedback was an important improvement channel.
The profit, quality, and productivity increases in this study are generally much larger than corresponding results from microcredit access or business training programs. This suggests that increasing market access may be relatively more important to SME growth in developing countries.
Sources
- IFC: Scaling-Up SME Access to Financial Services in the Developing World 2010
- Cadot, Olivier, et al. 2011. "Impact Evaluation of Trade Assistance: Paving the Way." Where to Spend the Next Million?
- Melitz, Marc J. 2008. "International trade and heterogeneous firms." New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics.
- Clerides, Sofronis K., Saul Lach, and James R. Tybout. 1998. "Is learning by exporting important? Micro-dynamic evidence from Colombia, Mexico, and Morocco." The Quarterly Journal of Economics 113.3: 903-947.
- Bernard, Andrew B., and J. Bradford Jensen. 1999. "Exceptional exporter performance: cause, effect, or both?." Journal of international economics 47.1: 1-25.