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Spatiotemporal evolution of production cooperation between China and Central and Eastern European countries: An analysis based on the input–output technique
Author(s) -
Zheng Zhi,
Song Zhouying,
Ji Qidi,
Xiong Wei
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
growth and change
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.657
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 1468-2257
pISSN - 0017-4815
DOI - 10.1111/grow.12476
Subject(s) - china , production (economics) , promotion (chess) , value (mathematics) , global value chain , business , value chain , added value , international trade , economics , international economics , politics , economic system , comparative advantage , supply chain , geography , political science , macroeconomics , archaeology , finance , marketing , machine learning , computer science , law
Abstract Despite frequent political interactions, economic cooperation between China and Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) countries has progressed quite slowly, raising the question of why the economic cooperation of China and CEE countries stagnates and how to promote sustainable bilateral cooperation. This study explored the spatiotemporal evolution of China–CEE production cooperation and the value‐added structure of bilateral exports by the long time‐sequenced multi‐region input–output table and methods of input–output technique. The results show that although the production cooperation intensity of China and CEE countries has been increasing in both directions, neither side currently comprises the main foreign production cooperation direction of each other, and the intensity of production cooperation remains low. From the perspective of value‐added structure, foreign value‐added accounts comprise the greatest proportion of exports from CEE countries to China, while a large part of China’s intermediate exports go to other European countries after being imported by CEE countries, which indicates that CEE countries have played an important role of the bridge between China and Europe. States are undoubtedly important in the promotion of global value chain connections. Governments should correctly identify their own advantageous industries in global value chains and focus on extending the industrial chain to formulate cooperation plans. Strengthening the value chain link with Western European countries through production cooperation and improving the capacity of value capture are important directions for China–CEE cooperation.