WPS5187 Policy Research Working Paper 5187 Bosnia and Herzegovina's Surprising Export Performance Back to the Past in a New Veil but Will It Last? Bartlomiej Kaminski Francis Ng The World Bank Development Research Group Trade and Integration Team January 2010 Policy Research Working Paper 5187 Abstract Bosnia and Herzegovina's industrial restructuring, as seen in terms of both per capita and gross domestic product through the lenses of foreign trade performance and its in comparison with other Balkan economies, there has sustainability, has taken off. Bosnia and Herzegovina's been significant change in their composition, indicating exports have displayed strong dynamics outstripping the a growing presence of more processed manufactures pace of growth of exports in almost each year over 1997­ and the participation of local firms in global networks 2007 combined with the shift to higher value added of production and distribution, mostly as independent exportables. Although its performance during the period suppliers. Firms with foreign participation have been 1996-2000 following the end of war in late 1995 was not one of the levers of export upgrading and expansion. The surprising, given relatively low foreign direct investment dominance of joint ventures as a mode of entry of foreign inflows and weaknesses in the investment climate, its capital is worrisome for two reasons: first, domestic firms subsequent export performance has come as a surprise. may not have access to the most recent technologies Industrial restructuring, as revealed in the pattern of and knowhow; and second, it is always indicative of exports, consisted in rebuilding and modernizing the weaknesses of a domestic economic regime. This also pre-independence industrial base built around wood raises concerns about the future sustainability of export products, metalworking, clothing, and automotive performance. products. Although exports still remain relatively low This paper--a product of the Trade and Integration Team, Development Research Group--is part of a larger effort in the department to analyze regional integration and trade policy. Policy Research Working Papers are also posted on the Web at http://econ.worldbank.org. The author may be contacted at fng@worldbank.org. The Policy Research Working Paper Series disseminates the findings of work in progress to encourage the exchange of ideas about development issues. An objective of the series is to get the findings out quickly, even if the presentations are less than fully polished. The papers carry the names of the authors and should be cited accordingly. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the authors. They do not necessarily represent the views of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. Produced by the Research Support Team Bosnia and Herzegovina's Surprising Export Performance: Back to the Past in a New Veil but Will It Last? / By Bartlomiej Kaminski University of Maryland, College Park, US, and University of Information Technology and Management, Rzeszow, Poland and Francis Ng Development Research Group ­ International Trade and Integration, World Bank, Washington, D.C. Key words: integration, foreign trade, network trade, parts and components, factor intensity, foreign direct investment, industrial restructuring, revealed comparative advantage, export specialization JEL classification: F10, F13, F14, F15, L16 / A revised and abridged version of a background report "Governance and Foreign Trade Performance of Bosnia and Herzegovina: The Challenge of Sustaining Impressive External Performance," prepared for Bosnia and Herzegovina: Country Economic Memorandum. The authors are grateful to Orhan Niksic for useful comments and suggestions on the draft of the above report. * Emails of correspondence: "Bart Kaminski"; "Francis Ng" 2 | P a g e Introduction The past decade following the end of the war has witnessed significant changes in the composition of Bosnia and Herzegovina's (BiH's) foreign trade indicative of ongoing reconstruction and modernization of BiH's industrial base. The relative position of natural resource and unskilled labor intensive products has declined indicating shifts in a causal chain linking factor endowments, comparative advantage and trade patterns. The most striking feature of industrial restructuring is the close of the gap between highly skilled labor force in such sectors as metalworking and mechanical and automotive engineering and a country's export basket characteristic of the period immediately following the end of war by dominance of natural resource and unskilled laborintensive exports. Inflows of FDI combined with the return of BiH refugees, some of them with business skills acquired during the forced emigration have put BiH on a new path, although--in terms of emerging patterns of specialization--on the one that BiH had earlier negotiation, albeit in a completely different external and internal circumstances. BiH has experienced strong export growth over the last decade, although from very low levels depressed by the war. While imports have grown rather steadily since the Dayton Agreement put an end to the war in late 1995, exports have gone through three different phases: strong recovery in 199699, stagnation in 200002, and robust resumption of growth in 200307. During the last phase, BiH exports growth has resulted in an almost twofold increase in BiH share in world exports: the value of exports increased 85 percent in 200406 followed by Serbia (66 percent), and its share in world exports grew from 0.017 percent in 2000 to 0.027 percent in 2006, which was by far the largest increase among SEE countries. But in 2007, its share in world exports grew only 3.7 percent (only Croatia's share increased 0.1 percentage point less, i.e., 3.6 percent) while that of the other SEE economies increased more than 20 percent thus raising concerns whether the expansion will be sustained. Dynamism in export growth has been accompanied by shifts in its composition increasingly in line with the prewar industrial structure of the BiH economy. Although ranked next to Macedonia as the poorest republic in former Yugoslavia, BiH had a welldeveloped industrial base built around its endowments in natural resources (forests, hydropower, coal, iron, ore, copper, manganese, bauxite), the political decision to locate many of former Yugoslavia's defense plants there, as well as its specialization in agricultural equipment and automotive parts. Much of its industrial base has not survived the war. But both human capital--thanks to the return of many refugees with business skills acquired abroad--and the natural resource base remained intact. It appears that reconstruction, mainly driven by FDI, has contributed to the most recent export growth phase. In contrast to the first phase in 3 | P a g e 199699, when naturalresource intensive and unskilled labor intensive products were the main levers of export expansion, capital and skilled labor intensive products drove the export expansion in 200307. The shift in factor content of exports towards capital and skilled labor intensive products has significant implications for future competitiveness of the BiH economy. Since labor costs in BiH are relatively high, unskilled laborintensive exports, such as textiles and footwear, face the growing competition from lowwage countries not only in Asia but also from other Balkan economies. While some of them are likely to withstand this competition thanks to geographical proximity allowing shifting to higher value added apparel, as already demonstrated by some BiH firms, the contribution of these sectors to export earnings is likely to continue falling. Furthermore, in contrast to exports of low processed resourcebased products, industries using intensively skilled labor and capital tend to pay higher wages. In consequence, exports of these sectors boost output growth and help improve living standards and reduce poverty. Since mirror statistics provide a more adequate picture of BiH export performance than BiH statistics, we use the former. The problem with the BiH foreign trade statistics assessed against other national statistics is that, contrary to widespread practice of underreporting imports in developing countries, they underreport exports while accurately reporting imports. BiH exports statistics have consistently underestimated the extent to which its exports basket has evolved over the last several years. The paper is structured as follows: Section 1 examines dynamics of BiH export performance since the end of war in 1995 distinguishing three phases: postwar recovery; stagnation; and current expansion. Levers of export growth performance during the recent expansion phase are addressed in Section 2. Section 3 discusses change in factor intensities of BiH export performance against other SEE economies and the role of FDI in BiH exports. Section 4 concludes. 1. Export performance: Recovery, slowdown, and expansion Continued expansion of imports and occasionally explosive exports has characterized BiH foreign trade performance since the 1995 Dayton Peace agreement. Despite volatility, one may distinguish three phases in dynamics of BiH exports based on below or above singledigit growth rates: postwar recovery of exports in 19961998; slowdown in 199901; and the current phase of export expansion since 200203. Doubledigit growth rates in the values of exports have characterized both expansionary phases, whereas during the slowdown phase growth rates of exports in terms of value fell into a singledigit territory. However, despite the slowdown in export growth, the share of BiH export in 4 | P a g e world exports increased indicating better than average performance.1 In all, exports displayed huge volatility during the postwar recovery, stability during slow down and steady growth during the current expansionary phase, although at falling--but still doubledigit--growth rates: both phases had oneyear surges in exports growth of 67 percent in 1997 and 58 percent in 2004. Viewed in the regional perspective of other SEE5 exports performance, the share of BiH in total regional exports increased in 199799, was stable in 19992001, increased in 2002, contracted in 2003, and rebounded in200406, only to fall slightly in 2007 (Figure 1). Figure 1: BiH export growth performance in regional perspective: annual growth rates and share in SEE5 exports in 1997 2006 (in percent) 70 18 60 16 14 BiH growth Growth rate (in percent) 50 12 rate of 40 exports in 10 goods Share (in percent) 30 8 6 20 BiH share in 4 SEE5 10 exports of 2 goods 0 0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Note: No regional total exports are available, because as of July 2007, not all SEE-5 countries reported their trade data to the UN COMTRADE database. Sources: own calculations from data reported to the UN COMTRADE database. While high doubledigit growth rates during the postwar recovery do not come as surprise, the current expansion points to the progress achieved in industrial restructuring. The current phase has been particularly impressive in the pace of exports growth. BiH has displayed a very strong export performance during the current expansion phase relative to other SEEeconomies. Its share in aggregate SEE6 exports of goods rose from 2 percent in 1997 to 12 percent during the last year of postwar recovery in 2000. It fell to 10 percent by the end of the stagnation phase in 2002. Despite the value of 1 Its share increased from 0.014 percent in 2000 to 0.015 percent in 2001, and 0.017 percent in 2002 (derived from the UN COMTRADE database). 5 | P a g e BiH exports growing annually at 3334 percent in 200305, its share only slightly increased to 11 percent in 200304 and 12 percent in 2005, mainly because of the reentry of the "postKosovo and post Milosevic" Serbia and Montenegro (S&M) into world markets following the 45 percent contraction of total exports in 1999.2 The conditions surrounding S&M exports growth are strongly reminiscent of the postwar phase of the BiH export dynamics. The value of S&M exports reached the preKosovo war level in 1998 only in 2003. The share of S&M in total SEE exports grew from 22 percent in 2001 to 30 percent in 2006. Over the same time period, the share of BiH increased from 11 percent to 15 percent. In 2007, it fell, however, to 14.2 percent. While the choice of the base year or the use of measures in terms of value may yield slightly different results, the average LSG growth rate in the share of a country's exports in world imports over 200307 provides a much more accurate measure of export performance. It is not affected by the change in relative prices of exported products and is less sensitive to the choice of a base year: we set it in 2003 as this is the beginning of the expansion phase in BiH exports. Furthermore, the use of mirror statistics puts to rest concerns about the quality of foreign trade reporting by SEE6: since most of SEE6 exports go to highly developed countries with the best reporting system in the world, they are as reliable as they can get. As can be seen from data presented in Table 1, each SEE has succeeded in increasing its market share in total world markets. Except for Croatia, their average LSG rates were in double digits, with BiH slightly below growth rates achieved by Macedonia and S&M (Serbia and Montenegro). Table 1: Dynamics of exports in terms of value of exports and evolving shares in world markets in 20032007 (in percent) LS Growth Rate 200307 (%) Export Share in World Markets (%) SEE5 Export Value Wld Mkt Share 2001 2003 2005 2006 2007 Albania 18.9 4.2 0.0058 0.0064 0.0062 0.0063 0.0078 BiH 27.5 12.8 0.0152 0.0166 0.0254 0.0272 0.0282 Croatia 17.3 2.6 0.0543 0.0649 0.0715 0.0723 0.0749 Macedonia, FYR 27.7 13.1 0.0167 0.0144 0.0185 0.0198 0.0259 Serbia and Montenegro 26.7 12.1 0.0254 0.0324 0.0451 0.0476 0.0572 Source: Based on world import data from the UN COMTRADE Statistics. Despite impressive growth in the 2000s, BiH as well as SEE region's exports remain very low: on a per capita, they amounted to US$857 in 2007 as compared to US$ 5,620 for the EU8. The value of 2 Annual rates of growth of Serbia and Montenegro exports in terms of value were 25 percent and 47 percent in 2003 and 2004 respectively (derived from the UN COMTRADE database). 6 | P a g e Macedonia exports per capita of US$1,495 was 83 percent above BiHs (US$818) and that of Croatia 199 percent. Albania's exports per capita stood at 39 percent of BiH exports While no reliable foreign trade data are available for the 1990s, the shift in the direction of BiH exports towards its two preferential partners--the EU and CEFTA 2006--has been beyond doubt. These two trading blocs take now around 90 percent of BiH total exports. Yet, the share of the EU, including its new member states from Central Europe, which grew from 53 percent in 2003 to 57 percent (Table 2), remains somewhat below the levels experienced by other European transition economies throughout the 1990s ranging between 6065 percent.3 Table 2: Dynamics and direction of BiH exports in 200307: share of major partners and LSG rates of exports growth (in percent) Index 2007, LSG rate 2003- 2003 2007 2003=100 07 EU-27 53.4 57.3 107 37.8 SEE-6 30.3 33.2 110 35.9 ROW 16.3 9.6 59 23.7 TOTAL 100.0 100.0 100 35.5 Source: UN COMTRADE database. BiH export performance does not come across as very impressive when cast against that of Central European EU8 members. The reference to EU8 as comparators seems to be justified for three intertwined reasons: these countries were on average roughly at a similar level of economic development when the transition to marketeconomies began in the early 1990s; and the SAA, not unlike the European Association Agreements for EU8, has started the EU accession process with huge implications for foreign trade policy and FDI inflows. The latter reveals itself in its impact on export performance operating through opening to competition from imports and. The caveat is twofold: in contrast to the EU8, BiH went through devastating war, and in contrast to BiH, EU8 adopted a radical approach to economic reforms. The differences in domestic circumstances of transition of EU8 and BiH are nakedly visible in their export performance. Except for the postwar recovery of exports phase, the EU8 outperformed BiH and other SEEeconomies in terms of volumes of exports of goods and services in other two phases with the difference in growth in their favor of 1.4 percentage points and 0.8 percentage points of average LS growth rates, respectively. Hence, the gap between the EU8 and SEE including BiH has 3 This share refers to trade with the EU15, not EU27. Hence, the discrepancy is even larger than implied by these numbers. 7 | P a g e continued to increase. In terms of goods exports in current prices, the situation was slightly different: BiH recorded stronger export growth not only during the postwar phase but also during the current expansionary phase. The differences in LSG rates in favor of BiH were quite significant: 18.2 percentage points and 7.4 percentage points, respectively (see Table 3). Table 3: BiH export performance in goods and nonfactor services in constant prices and in goods in current prices in comparative perspective in 19962007 LS Growth Rate (%) Change 2007 Country 19962000 20002003 20032007 over 2006 (%) Exports of goods & nonfactor services in constant 2000 prices Bosnia and Herzegovina 16.0 5.8 11.7 12.5 SEE4 (excl. BiH) na 5.5 7.0 8.4 Memo: EU8 10.6 6.6 12.5 12.2 Exports of goods in current prices Bosnia and Herzegovina 25.8 6.5 28.9 25.4 SEE4 (excl. BiH) na na 27.6 27.2 Memo: EU8 7.6 16.2 21.5 27.8 Note: EU8 includes Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovak Republic and Slovenia: SEE4 includes Albania, Croatia, Macedonia and S&M. Sources: World Bank WDI database for goods and nonfactor services and UN COMTRADE Statistics for goods. BiH has also recorded better performance than the average for other SEE4 economies across all three phases. It had a larger edge in the increase of exports in terms of volume than in value indicating that other SEEeconomies faced more favorable change in their terms of trade. Relatively impressive record of the BiH export performance raises several questions addressed in the following sections: Has the expansion consisted simply of exporting more of the same goods? What do the changes in import demand tell us about the pace of industrial restructuring? What do the changes in exports depending on the degree of processing embodied in exported products tell us about BiH's industrial capacities? What characteristics do new star performers embody in terms of technology and the degree of processing? 2. Drivers of export expansion: Endowments in factors of production and changes in competitiveness Levers underlying the current phase of export expansion are complex ranging from more of the same to those heralding a significant change in competitiveness in the future. On the one hand, traditional sectors continue to generate most of BiH foreign currency earnings and account for the bulk of BiH exports. They have been growing and have demonstrated their competitiveness in world markets. 8 | P a g e On the other hand, BiH export basket has been changing: the earlier gap between its endowments in factors of production and factor intensities of exports appears to have considerably narrowed. There are also signs that BiH firms, emulating similar experience of Central European transition economies that are now EU members, enter more sophisticated forms of global division of labor based on production fragmentation. BiH foreign trade performance viewed through the lenses of the change in double­digit SITC sectors' exports and imports between 2003 and 2007 suggests that the export push has been broadly based and in line with BiH endowment in factors of production. Although BiH was one of the poorest republics of the old Yugoslav federation, despite endowments in such natural resources as iron ore, water, forests, lead, and zinc, it had a relatively well developed production capacities in such sectors as defense industries (mainly production and assembly of tanks and aircrafts), automotive (vehicle assembly and production of parts), steel, textiles, tobacco products, wooden furniture, domestic appliances, and oil refining. Metalworking and mechanical and automotive engineering were among main manufacturing specializations of BiH in the FSR of Yugoslavia. Some of these industries were devastated by war and postwar economic mismanagement including delays in privatization. Furthermore, there were losses in human capital: some highly skilled workers emigrated and never returned; some were killed; but many returned and, it appears, have found employment in rebuilt and restructured industries. Changes in foreign trade indicate that BiH is on the way to rebuild its prewar specialization patterns, albeit in a new form. The hysteresis effect has been occurring as many of these capacities have been either reconstructed or created de novo and turned into internationally competitive industrial sectors. Indeed, the relative position of natural resourceintensive products has declined indicating the shift in a causal chain linking factor endowments, comparative advantage and trade patterns towards capital and skilled laborintensive product. This outcome is rather unexpected considering weaknesses in BiH economic institutions and policies, which usually prevent a match between factor intensities revealed in export baskets and country's endowments. A. Major net exporters: traditional sectors albeit with a twist While the export coverage of goods in terms of their imports remains relatively low, the improved export performance of `traditional' sectors made a huge contribution to financial sustainability of external performance, discussed earlier in Section 4. What sectors are major net foreign currency earners? While in 2003 seven double­digit SITC sectors, out of the total of 98 product groups, were net exporters, i.e., the value of their exports was higher than of their imports, their number grew 9 | P a g e to 11 in 2007 (see Table 4). Net exporters accounted for 50 percent of BiH total exports in 2003: four years later their aggregate share in total exports increased to 53 percent, as total net exports increased more than threefolds from US$ 306 million to US$ 949 million with the export coverage of total goods imports increasing from 31 percent to 43 percent. Their contribution measured in terms of their combined share in the difference between the value of exports in 2007 and 2003 amounted to 51 percent. Table 4: Twodigit SITC sectors with the largest contribution to improvement in foreign trade performance between 2003 and 2007 (in percent and millions of US dollars) Export in Share in Share in Index 2007 Share in Net Net LSG rate exports exports 2007 minus in total exports exports Product Name 200307 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 difference 2003 2007 24 Cork and wood 22 10.7% 7.0% 65 179 5.7% 105.0 267.0 68 Nonferrous metals 25 16.3% 10.0% 61 248 7.9% 124.0 213.0 82 Furniture/furnishings 35 8.5% 7.1% 83 206 6.6% 29.0 162.0 85 Footwear 43 5.3% 5.8% 110 188 6.0% 9.0 94.0 28 Metal ores and metal scrap 58 2.3% 6.8% 299 257 8.2% 20.0 79.0 71 Power generating equipment 34 6.5% 5.9% 92 180 5.8% 6.0 65.0 35 Electric current 31 4.6% 3.8% 83 111 3.5% 47.0 25.0 27 Crude fertilizer/mineral 38 0.8% 0.8% 108 26 0.8% 0.0 16.0 32 Coal/coke/briquettes 55 1.3% 3.6% 280 135 4.3% 5.0 12.0 21 Hide/skin/fur, raw 13 2.6% 1.0% 40 17 0.5% 22.2 9.2 52 Inorganic chemicals 89 0.1% 1.4% 1048 56 1.8% 9.4 7.2 Note: the value of net exports equals the difference between the value of a sector's exports and its imports. Source: Based on UN COMTRADE Statistics. Sectors that joined the rank of net exporters point to the increase in diversification of BiH export offer as well as to a significant progress in industrial restructuring. The "newcomers" range from exporters of raw materials (metal ores and metal scrap) to process production (inorganic chemicals), and capital and skilled laborintensive engineering products (power generating equipment).4 Two sectors that have significantly reduced their foreign trade balance and may be on the path to become net exporters have been metal manufactured goods (SITC 69) and apparel (SITC 84). The former increased its share in total exports from 4 percent in 2003 to 8 percent in 2007, while the difference between exports and imports of these products fell from US$ 84 million to US$ 10 million over this period. The corresponding data for apparel are as follows: the share contracted from 6 percent 4 In the context of the emergence of metals ores and scrap as a net exporter, note the contraction in net exports of other raw materials, skins and furs. The value of its net exports fell from US$ 22 million in 2003 to US$ 9 million in 2007. Both appear to be healthy developments reflecting relative scarcities and changing profiles of further processing. 10 | P a g e to 4 percent, and the `trade balance' from US$ 29 million to US$ 12 million. Considering competition in world markets for apparel and clothing from China and other lowcost exporters, performance of BiH producers strikes one as impressive demonstrating their capacity to find niches at higher end of the market (e.g., Borac's contract to supply Hugo Boss) and compete successfully in domestic markets. While all netexporting sectors posted strong growth over 200307, there has been some realignment in their relative positions in favor of net exporters of nonrenewable natural resource intensive products, albeit with some exceptions. The largest increase in the value of exports in 2007 over 2003 was for metal ores (US$ 257 million accounting for 8.2 percent of the difference in the value of total exports in 2007 and 2003) and nonferrous metals (US$ 248 million or 7.9 percent). These sectors benefitted from the increase in world prices for many raw materials in this period. Exceptions to the general pattern of specialization in natural resourcebased products included power generating equipment, which emerged as a net exporter already in 2005, although its share in total exports slightly contracted to 5.9 percent in 2007 from 6.5 percent in 2003, and footwear, whose net exports (exports minus imports) increased tenfold over this period from US$ 9 million to US$ 90 million. Major export market for these two product groups is the EU taking more than 96 percent of their exports. BiH has been successful in reviving its traditional patterns of specialization in line with its endowments in natural resources and production factors. In terms of twodigit SITC sectors, the largest push to positive net exports came from natural resourceintensive products. But not only, as the emergence of footwear industry and power generating equipment producers as net exporters in 2007 clearly testifies to regaining competitive advantage that seemed to be lost to the war devastation. The increase in the value of net exports of these sectors from US$306 million in 2003 to US$949 million in 2007 testifies to their successful restructuring and modernization. B. Wood cluster and foreign trade Given BiH endowments in the forest resource base, with forest lands covering around 4247 percent of BiH (USA AID 2006), it comes as no surprise that the forest and wood sector together with industries using it as a major raw material is a major next exporter. With around half of its territory covered by forests, BiH may be justifiably considered woodland. Many industries have developed using wood as primary or secondary input. It is estimated that around 130 thousand people work directly in wood harvesting and processing (USAID 2006). Products of this sector range from logs to their various 11 | P a g e forms of processing and woodbased products. The purpose of this note is to assess contribution of wood and woodrelated products to BiH foreign trade performance. The approach taken to address the role of the wood cluster in BiH foreign trade uses common sense, insights gleaned from various sector studies as well as information on Harmonized System code used by exporters of wood and woodbased products. We identify the following stages in terms of the degree of processing taking place in wood valuechain: logging; primary wood processing (wood harvesting including sawlogs and fuelwood); secondary wood processing (joinery, wood boxes, pallets, furniture) 5; and other wood based products (paper, cartons, etc.). Annex Table 1 identifies products in terms of sixdigit HS (Harmonized System) items, which allows reproducing their foreign trade flows in terms of the level of processing (Table 5). Table 5: Developments in wood cluster trade (forest `gate' and woodbased products) in 200307 (in million of US dollars and percent) 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Exports in millions of US dollars Logs 6.1 12.1 19.2 34.0 40.8 Primary wood processing 8.8 12.6 11.0 12.9 13.8 Secondary wood processing 197.5 276.5 325.9 485.6 579.6 Other wood based products 11.1 34.4 43.7 56.4 71.0 Total above 223.7 336.0 400.2 589.3 705.8 Share in total exports 21.8 20.8 16.8 17.2 17.0 Composition of exports (in percent) Logs 2.7 3.6 4.8 5.8 5.8 Primary wood processing 3.9 3.8 2.8 2.2 2.0 Secondary wood processing 88.3 82.3 81.4 82.4 82.1 Other wood based products 5.0 10.2 10.9 9.6 10.1 Total above 100 100 100 100 100 Exports in percent of imports Logs 8,993 5,993 12,096 22,362 27,830 Primary wood processing 772 585 167 471 219 Secondary wood processing 251 299 264 378 310 Other wood based products 15 35 33 39 39 Total above 141 169 145 203 180 Total imports of forest 'gate' and wood based products 159 199 276 291 391 Memorandum: difference between exports and imports in millions of US dollars 65 137 124 299 314 Memorandum: share in total exports 22% 21% 17% 17% 17% Source: Based on BiH's data from UN COMTRADE Statistics. 5 Their aggregate output was valued at around "... 132 million KM in 2003 and the BiH Foreign Trade Chamber claimed that wood and furniture industry products accounted for 21 percent of the country's export earnings this year." (USAID 2006, p. 4). 12 | P a g e An examination of data on trade of the wood cluster leads to the following observations: First, total exports of forest 'gate' and wood based products significantly increased over 200307, although at the rates lagging behind the growth of total exports. The value of wood cluster exports more than tripled: their total exports amounted to US$ 706 million in 2007 contributing 17 percent to the total down from 22 percent in 2003 (Table 5). Second, there are indications of the increase in the level of processing embodied in exports, although products of secondary wood processing continue towering over other woodrelated exports with their share in total slowly decreasing from 88 percent in 2003 to 82 percent in 2007. Note however that although the export coverage of imports increased in logs, it fell in other stages of processing except for most processed other wood products. It might be tempting to argue that BiH `woodcluster' export basket should be more oriented towards higher stages of processing. Profitability and value added generated by activity should be the major determinant of allocation of activities to various stages. Viewed in a regional perspective, the composition is neither better nor worse. Secondary wood processed products together with other wood based products accounted in BiH exports (92 percent) roughly for a similar share (91 percent) as in combined exports of Serbia and Montenegro. Third, the wood cluster has remained one of the major export earners displaying very strong growth in net exports during the current phase. The value of net exports (difference between the value of exports of wood and woodbased products) increased between 2003 and 2007 almost fivefold from US$65 million to US$314 million. The average LSG rate of exports forest 'gate' and wood based products in 200307 was 29 percent as compared to 22 percent for their imports. Recent developments in foreign trade in furniture made of wood, representing a secondary wood processing stage, provide an interesting illustration of broader developments in the wood cluster. In 2006, this subsector recorded its first surplus of US$8 million since 1995. Although imports increased 38 percent in 2007, the increase in the value of exports of 36 percent was sufficiently large to increase next exports to US$10 million (Table 6). Table 6: Exports and imports of furniture made of wood in 200106 (in million of US dollars) Trade Value ($ million) SITCR3 Product 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 8215 Exports of wood furniture 14 17 16 31 34 47 64 8215 Imports of wood furniture 33 37 37 43 41 39 54 Difference: exportsimports 19 20 21 12 7 8 10 Source: Based on partners' data from UN COMTRADE Statistics. 13 | P a g e Developments in foreign trade of the wood cluster point to the success of businesses taking advantage of BiH ample endowment in forests. The challenge for the authorities is to ensure rational management of this important resource. C. Level of processing embodied in exports In fact, a cursory examination of imports from BiH, as reported by BiH's trading partners, points to growing specialization in more processed goods. According to partners' statistics, the share of BiH in total world imports of the following product groups increased: machinery excluding automobiles; automobiles and parts; and consumer goods. The increase was particularly impressive in sectors producing machinery (Table 7). Table 7: World imports from BiH in terms of enduse products in 200307 (in percent) Composition of Share in world Change in share in world Enduse Product imports in 2007 imports in 2007 imports in 2007 over 2003 Agriculture, Food & Feeds 13.8 0.048 123 Industrial Raw Materials 16.8 0.100 139 Fuels 6.0 0.012 192 Iron and Steel 7.3 0.060 142 Machinery excluding automobiles 14.3 0.015 529 Automobiles & Parts 1.4 0.005 360 Other Consumer Goods 40.5 0.034 341 All Goods 100.0 0.028 197 Note: Agricultural Food & Feeds (SITC 0+1+2+42728); Industrial Raw Materials (SITC 27+28+68); Fuels (SITC 3); Iron and steel (SITC 67); Machinery excluding automobiles (SITC 778); Automobiles & Parts (SITC 78); Other Consumer Goods (SITC 5+6+8+96768); All Goods (0 to 9). Source: Derived from data reported by BiH trading partners to the UN COMTRADE database. Not surprisingly considering that the EU27 is a major export market for BiH, a more detailed examination of EU statistics corroborates observations derived from world statistics of imports from BiH rather than those implied by BiH statistics. If anything, they indicate rather a significant progress in BiH industrial restructuring as captured by changes in competitiveness of various product groups. EU mirror statistics also point to pluggingin of BiH suppliers into global automotive networks discussed in more detail in Section 6. The shift away from lowprocessed goods can be easily inferred from gleaning data tabulated in Table 8. The aggregate share of traditional imports (foods, raw materials, and fuels) fell from 38 percent in 2003 to 29.5 percent in 2007. Except for agricultural foods and feeds, other categories from this group have experienced the loss in market share in the EU since 2005. Simultaneously, the aggregate share of machinery and automotive parts, i.e., highly processed manufactured goods increased from 11.7 14 | P a g e percent to 21.3 percent in this period. The latter have also displayed the increase in terms of value only second to iron and steel: the average LSG rate was 42 percent for automotive goods and 38 percent for machinery excluding automobiles as compared with 23 percent for total exports. There is also a strong indication that producers of clothing and footwear has been able to find higher value added niche in this extremely competitive market in spite of high wages in BiH. The share of other consumer goods, dominated in past by textile and clothing and footwear, fell steadily from 47 percent in 2003 to 39 percent in 2006, despite the fact that BiH exporters of these products outperformed other suppliers and increased their presence in EU markets. It sharply increased in 2007 to 44 percent of total EUoriented exports. The share of other consumer goods in EU imports increased 17 percent in 2007 over 2006. The Borac's--the largest clothing producer in BiH--contract to supply Hugo Boss at higher end clothing has probably contributed to this outcome. Table 8: EU imports from BiH in terms of enduse products: their composition, share in EU imports, and dynamics in 200307 (in percent) LS Growth 2003 Composition of Imports (%) Share in EU27 Imports (%) 07 (%) EU EU Product 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Imports share Agriculture, Food & Feeds 15.0 13.5 11.0 10.1 10.7 0.143 0.153 0.148 0.160 0.160 13.6 2.7 Industrial Raw Materials 18.7 22.1 21.6 21.6 17.4 0.468 0.533 0.575 0.492 0.376 21.6 5.2 Fuels 4.3 0.7 2.7 1.8 1.4 0.023 0.004 0.013 0.009 0.008 11.0 12.1 Machinery, excl. automobiles 10.9 13.3 21.3 18.7 19.4 0.033 0.044 0.082 0.081 0.088 38.4 26.0 Auto and Parts 0.8 1.8 2.0 2.1 1.9 0.015 0.037 0.049 0.059 0.051 42.4 29.0 Iron and Steel 2.8 3.1 3.3 6.2 5.4 0.187 0.163 0.192 0.335 0.221 43.4 10.6 Other Consumer Goods 47.6 45.6 38.1 39.4 43.9 0.119 0.131 0.120 0.132 0.155 20.2 5.3 All Goods 100 100 100 100 100 0.088 0.096 0.105 0.112 0.116 23.3 7.0 Source: Derived from trade reported by the EU to the UN COMTRADE database. Another evidence of the change towards more processed goods is the change in the composition of BH's export specialization index (ESI6) in EU markets. Although ESI with values exceeding 6 The ESI is a modified version of wellknown revealed comparative advantage (RCA) originally introduced by Bela Balassa (1965). While the RCA is the ratio of the share of a given product in BH's total exports to the share of that same product in world imports, the ESI is the same ratio but not to the share in world imports but in a selected market, e.g. the EU's total external imports. An ESI with a value that exceeds unity suggests a strong specialization in the product. An ESI value exceeding unity implies that BH is more specialized in exporting the product to, for instance, the EU than an average trading partner of the EU. 15 | P a g e unity tend to be concentrated in products characterized by the low level of processing (e.g., wood, iron ore, raw hides and fur skins, flour, footwear, leather and leather products, nonferrous metals scrap, honey and sugar), two developments point toward restructuring of exportoriented industries. First, the export offer of products with ESI above unity in EU markets increased over 200207 from 47 threedigit SITC products to 71 product groups.7 This indicates a wider export offer and its larger diversification. Second, the most visible change, however, relates to higher value added manufactures which have gained comparative advantage in EU markets. These new `competitive' entrants include among others such product groups as metal working machinery (SITC 737), trailers and other vehicles (786), textile and leather machinery (724), and internal combustion piston engines (713). Processed foods-- cereals meals and flours (047) and edible products and preparations (098)--have also acquired specialization in EU markets. 3. FDI and export performance: Implications of the dominance of joint ventures Like experiences in other Central European transition economies, BH has witnessed restructuring in factor intensities during the second phase of export expansion. While BH relied heavily on exports of natural resourcebased and unskilled laborintensive products during the postwar reconstruction phase, strongly reminiscent of exports of Central European radical reformers during the initial stages of transition following the collapse of central planning, capital and skilled labor intensive products drove the export growth during the second expansion phase (Kaminski 2007). Unskilled labor intensive products together with natural resourceintensive were the main levers of exports growth during the reconstruction phase: their combined share increased from 73 percent in 1996 to 79 percent in 2000 (Table 9), with the growth of the share of unskilled labor accounting for 60 percent of the increase. Transformation towards higher value added products has occurred mainly in exports to the EU27: composition of EU and ROWoriented exports diverges widely emphasizing the importance of EU markets to welfare of BiH. 7 In SEE6 markets, the number of products with ESI above unity increased from 36 to 50 over the same period. 16 | P a g e Table 9: Exports of BiH and other SEE5 economies in terms of factors' intensity in 1996, 2000, and 2007 (in percent) Share of Total Factor Intensity (%) Unskilled Capital and Capital and Skilled Labor Natural Resources Unskilled Labor Labor 2000 Skilled Labor in 2007 1996 2000 2007 1996 2000 2007 1996 2000 2007 1996=100 1996=100 2000=100 Albania 40.1 27.9 39.0 51.6 59.3 48.2 8.4 12.8 12.8 115 153 100 BiH 50.0 56.4 41.3 22.5 25.5 19.8 27.5 18.0 38.9 113 141 216 Croatia 33.0 30.9 39.8 31.1 30.0 16.5 35.9 39.1 43.7 96 122 112 Macedonia, FYR 43.9 30.6 43.6 33.5 32.5 24.9 22.6 36.9 31.5 97 139 85 Serbia & Montenegro 37.0 46.8 39.0 11.5 17.2 12.2 51.5 36.0 48.8 149 95 136 SEE5 37.1 37.3 40.3 27.2 28.4 18.1 35.6 34.3 41.7 104 117 121 Notes: The classification of factor intensity categories is based on SITC 4-digit products in revision 1. Indexes calculated for shares of skilled labor and capital intensive products in total exports Source: Computations based on world data from UN COMTRADE database. During the current expansion phase, the relative position of natural resourceintensive product has declined indicating shift in a causal chain linking factor endowments, comparative advantage and trade patterns. The postwar recovery phase was characterized by a growing gap between a country's large pool of skilled labor force and labor intensive products being the major driver of export expansion. Skills of workers employed in metalworking and mechanical and automotive engineering "... considered to be among the highest skilled workforce in the FSR of Yugoslavia" (FIPA 2003, p. 11 and 12) remained untapped until the 2000s. The share of unskilled labor intensive products increased in total exports between 1996 and 2000. It fell significantly in 200007. So did the share of natural resource intensive products falling by 15 percentage points in this period. In contrast, BiH experienced the largest increase among SEEeconomies in the share of capital and skilled labor intensive exports in 200007. FDI has been critical to closing the gap between endowments in skilled labor and the dominance of unskilled labor intensive exports in Central European transition economies. Foreign firms have brought capital, marketing and technological knowhow; have employed local skilled labor; and have taken advantage of unlimited access to EU single market. Put differently, BiH is well endowed in skilled labor force but not in capital: in other transition economies that experienced similar transformation in factor intensities, capital came from abroad. Since BiH has had both skilled labor and preferential access to EU markets, an interesting question is whether the same has happened in BiH. A. FDI and change in BiH export basket There is considerable evidence pointing to FDI as drivers of the current expansion in exports. Their impact on export was larger than relatively low FDI inflows might suggest, as foreign firms have 17 | P a g e focused on export oriented activities. According to a recent study (Silajdzic 2007), an average share of exports in total sales of firms with foreign participation was 64 percent as compared with an average of 33 percent for locallyowned firms. This is in line with the findings for other transition economies also pointing to higher propensity to exports of foreign owned firms (see Kaminski and Smarzynska 2001). Due to the war and institutional and policy dysfunctional nature of the BiH economic regime in its aftermath, FDI inflows were extremely low until around 200102 and subsequently increased although not as strongly as to Serbia and Montenegro. As of 2003, BiH had the smallest stock of FDI per capital among SEEeconomies. It stood at 53 percent of the FDI stock per capita in Albania; 28 percent of the level in Macedonia; and it was the same as that of Serbia and Montenegro. By 2007, it stood at 223 percent of the FDI per capita in Albania; 102 percent of the level in Macedonia; and it was at 80 percent of that in combined Serbia and Montenegro. BiH has been very successful in attracting FDI in 200307. In terms of GDP, BiH with 7.4 percent scored well above Albania and Macedonia (Table 10). It has also registered on average stronger growth than Romania (6.7 percent per year) but well below the levels of FDI inflows into Bulgaria and Montenegro. The latter following independence attracted huge FDI inflows exceeding 20 percent in both 2006 and 2007. In terms of FDI stock per capita, BiH has caught up with Macedonia. But except for Croatia with FDI stock per capita significantly higher than in all other countries including the 2007 new EU members, other SEE countries are well below the levels of FDI stock in Bulgaria and Romania. The value of total FDI stock in BiH amounted by the end of 2007 to around US$6 billion or US$1,576 per capita. Despite an impressive surge in 2007, this is still less than around one third of FDI stock per capita in Bulgaria; one fifth in Romania; and around seventh of the level in neighboring Croatia (Table 10). Table 10: FDI inflows to SEEeconomies and Bulgaria and Romania in terms of percent of GDP and values of FDI stock per capita (in US dollars) Average FDI, stock per capita in US$ 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 200307 2003 2006 2007 Albania 3.1 4.6 3.1 3.6 4.4 3.8 352 433 708 BiH 4.6 7.1 5.6 5.9 13.9 7.4 193 1,044 1,576 Croatia 6.9 3.0 4.6 8.0 9.6 6.4 2,057 6,219 10,143 Macedonia, FYR 2.1 2.9 1.7 5.5 4.2 3.3 687 1,382 1,542 Montenegro .. .. .. 22.9 25.2 24.1 352(a) 1,433(a) 1,960 (a) Serbia 6.7 3.9 6.1 14.7 7.8 7.9 ... ... ... Bulgaria 10.5 10.8 15.9 23.7 22.7 16.7 652 3,090 4,933 Romania 3.1 8.6 6.6 9.3 5.7 6.7 441 5,903 7,912 Note: (a) no information available separately for Montenegro and Bosnia. The total is for both countries. Source: own calculations from data in the UNCTAD FDI database. 18 | P a g e Over 20042007, the largest chunk of FDI flows went to the financial sector (41 percent) followed by telecommunications (26 percent in 2007 alone due the privatization of Telekom Srpske). Manufacturing took 18 percent of the total FDI inflows during this period. In terms of FDI stock, however, the share of industries producing tradable goods in total FDI stock appears to be larger amounting to almost 35 percent, which appears to be close to the average for transition economies. Metal industries (6.3 percent) followed by foods (6.2 percent) have been the major recipient of FDI. Unfortunately, no breakdown for "other industries" is available in FDI data obtained from the BiH Central Bank (Table 11). The origins of FDI are important for one reason: those inflows originating in highly developed countries and/or carried out by large MNCs are more likely to bring superior technology, organization and marketing skills. On this count, the picture is mixed as there is a conspicuous absence of large MNCs and a big chunk of FDI came from two neighboring countries--Serbia and Croatia. They accounted in 2008 for almost 30 percent of total FDI stock. Their large presence may point to the significance of direct informal links influencing investment decisions. On the other hand, however, the EU accounted for almost 50 percent of the FDI stock. Austria with 34 percent and Slovenia with 10 accounted for almost 90 percent of the EU total investments in BiH. Around 12 percent come from countries that have not been identified in statistics published by Central Bank of BiH (Figure 2). Table 11: FDI stock in 2007 by sectors of the national economy (in percent) Industries 34.5 Services 65.5 Foods & beverages 6.2 Construction 0.7 Sale, maintenance and repair of motor vehicles and Chemical products 1.6 motorcycles/retail sale of automotive fuel 1.4 Wholesale trade and commission trade, except of motor Other nonmetallic mineral products 3.3 vehicles and motorcycles 6.7 Manufacture of basic metals 5.3 Telecommunications 16.4 Manufacture of fabricated metal products, Financial intermediation, except insurance and pension except machinery and equipment 1.0 funding 38.1 Insurance and pension funding, except compulsory social Motor vehicles, trailers and semitrailers 1.6 security 1.0 Other industries 15.5 Real estate activities 1.3 Source: Base on the data provided by the Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina. 19 | P a g e Figure 2: Share in FDI stock in 2007 by a country of origin (in percent) Other countries 11.6 Multilateral organizations 0.4 Slovak Rep 0.4 Turkey 1.1 Italy 1.9 Netherlands 2.7 Germany 4.9 Switzerland 5.2 Slovenia 9.5 Croatia 11.6 Serbia and Montenegro 16.5 Austria 34.2 0.0 5.0 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0 35.0 Source: Central Bank of Bosnia and Herzegovina One way of assessing the impact of FDI on exports is to examine change in factor intensities embodied in the export basket. As argued earlier, the shift towards C&SL (capital and skilled labor intensive) products is unlikely to happen without FDI. In spite of the fact that FDI clustered around 2006 07, BiH experienced the largest increase in these exports among SEEeconomies with their growth exceeding the growth of total exports by a factor of two in 200007. The share increased 21 percentage points as compared to Serbia and Montenegro of 13 percentage points and Croatia with 5 percentage points: Albania's share did not change and Macedonia's contracted by 5 percentage points (Table 12). The caveat is that the share of C&SL intensive products was well below its trend in base year 2000 (see Table 11 above): in 19962007 the growth in the share of 41 percent puts BiH below Albania (51 percent) and slightly above Macedonia (39 percent). Furthermore, BiH exports of C&SL products on per capita basis are significantly lower than of other SEE countries except for Albania (Table 12). Table 12: Exports of capital and skilled laborintensive products and FDI stock in 2006 Exports of Capital & Ratio of FDI stock to Share of Capital Change in Share of Skilled Labor per Capital and Skilled and Skilled Labor Capital & Skilled Labor in Country capita in 2007 (US$) Labor Exports in 2007 Exports in 2007 Total Exp 2000/07 Albania 42 16.9 12.8 0 BiH 395 4.0 38.9 21 Croatia 1,017 10.0 43.7 5 Macedonia, FYR 559 2.8 31.5 5 Serbia & Montenegro 476 4.1 48.8 13 Sources: UN COMTRADE Statistics, World Bank WDI database and UNCTAD WIR database. 20 | P a g e The surge in the weight of C&SLintensive products indicates the growth in exports of machinery as well as participation of domestic firms in global division of labor based on production fragmentation or global sharing. The latter, also referred to as producerdriven networks, are dominant in electronic and automotive sectors. Domestic firms become then parts of producerdriven networks characterized by common ownership of verticallyintegrated stages of production managed by large MNCs. This is one of the critical links between changes in factor intensities and FDI. Having had examined developments in producerdriven network trade over 19962005, the authors of the World Bank study concluded that only "... BiH witnessed a jump ... in its network trade share..." and other SEE economies "... are underperformers..." (Kathuria 2008, p. 42). This should by no means suggest that BiH has been a `super performer,' as there are doubts as to its sustainability (Kathuria 2008, p. 44). Indeed, there is a reason to believe that BiH firms are not firmly entrenched into MNCdriven production and distribution networks. We can use the ratio of the FDI stock to the value of C&SL intensive exports as a proxy of the extent of foreign ownership in manufacturing. In the absence of consistent data on the distribution of FDI stocks in SEEeconomies, this is a very approximate measure. A high value of this ratio may suggest that firms exporting C&SL intensive products are foreign owned and operate in global MNCdriven production networks. Low values of this ratio may point to much larger presence of local capital and limited ownership by foreign MNCs. BiH ratio of 4.0, although on a par with that for Serbia and Montenegro and higher than in Macedonia, is relatively low indicating relatively strong local ownership. B. Mode of entry: implications of dominance of joint ventures Low ratio of FDI stock to C&SL exports combined with evidence from interviews points to joint ventures rather than subsidiaries as the dominant mode of entry of FDI into BiH. BiH firms have been successful in marketing their machinery products in world markets.8 So have they been in integrating into global automotive networks of production and distribution. The level of integration is similar to that of Central European automotive powerhouses--Czech Republic and Slovakia. Parts import intensity, defined as percent of parts imports in total network exports, rather dramatically declined from 384 in 2002 to 78 percent in 2006 (Table 13). This suggests a very significant increase in domestic processing and assembly operations of automotive products. For comparative purposes, note that parts import 8 The share of machinery in EU imports from BiH increased from 11 percent in 2003 to 19 percent in 2007 (as reported by the EU to the UN COMTRADE database). 21 | P a g e intensity of Slovak automotive network was 76 percent in 2002 and that for Czech Republic amounted to 53 percent in 2002 down from 97 and 89, respectively, in 1995 (Kaminski and Ng 2005). The data tabulated below do not capture fully BiH firms' involvement in global automotive networks for one reason. There are several tiers in their supply chains. According to Hill (1989, p. 466), the average Japanese automaker's production system constitutes of 170 firsttier, 4,700 secondtier and 31,600 thirdtier subcontractors. Historically, BiH firms specialized in intermediate goods supplying, for instance, up to 30 percent of components used in VW's assembly line in Sarajevo as well grade steel and other metals together with engineering components used in cars are produced in Serbia (MIGA 2006). Their products would fall into second or thirdtier of subcontracting: without a detailed examination of their enduse, it would be impossible to identify them in Standard International Trade Classification. Table 13 summarizes calculations presented in Annex Table 2 including only those products whose exports exceeded US$ 1 million in any single year over 200207. Table 13: Developments in trade in automotive networks of production and distribution in 200206 (in million of US dollars and percent) Export Value ($ millions) LS Growth (%) Product 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 200207 Auto network parts exports 17 70 127 192 211 205 46.1 Of which: Parts nes intc engines (SITC 7139) 5 59 103 155 164 157 58.9 Motor vehicle parts/access (SITC 784) 6 8 17 32 41 37 41.7 Auto network final products exports 2 3 13 7 8 18 36.1 Total Auto network exports 20 73 140 199 220 223 45.2 Share of auto network in total exports (%) 1.7 5.8 7.0 7.6 6.7 5.8 Auto network import intensity (%) 52 51 59 74 65 78 Sources: Based on partners' data from UN COMTRADE Statistics. Thus, the combination of joint ventures, as the mode of entry, and BiH's historical specialization, disrupted by the war, in machine building and automotive products explains a "jump" in BiH's network trade share, but both the mode of entry of foreign firms and narrow specialization base raises some concerns as to sustainability of these exports. Joint venture is a preferred mode of entry for firms when there is a need for a local partner because of `murky' business climate and a firm's competitive advantage does not derive from intangible factors. The latter largely exclude hightechnology firms with low capital cost of entry. Put differently, marketing driven firms (e.g., Coca Cola) tend to opt for a joint venture as a mode of entry whereas hightechnology firms establish commercial presence only insofar as they fully retain property rights, i.e., they enter through establishing subsidiaries. 22 | P a g e The case of two largest exporters of automotive products--Volkswagen and PSC TMD--amply illustrate these concerns. They export, among others, parts of internal combustion piston engines accounting for around threefourths of total automotive network exports. Both firms need "local involvement" to operate in BiH. Volkswagen reestablished its presence in BiH in 1998 as a joint venture with Prevent Sarajevo. Another major exporter, PSC TMD, is fully owned by the Cimos Group with headquarters in Slovenia. The danger is that VW may be reluctant to transfer technology to its BiH joint venture, whereas Cimos may not have attractive technologies to transfer. Both cases corroborate weaknesses in BiH business climate: VW Sarajevo is a joint venture, whereas the Cismos factory in BiH is owned by "former Yugoslavs," either Slovenes or Bosnians, or both. Whatever the case, "foreign owners" have an intimate knowledge of local conditions and do not need local insiders to navigate in BiH's murky business environment. But they also do not have direct access to technological knowhow that leading producers in the world have. Changes in various characteristics of BiH export basket point to limited transfer of technology embodied in investments in BiH, although no firm conclusion can be derived from this analysis. A closer examination of BiH export baskets suggests that neither technological content nor labor skills embodied in exported goods have changed significantly during the current export expansion phase corroborating the need to attract high quality FDI capable of technology transfer to sustain export performance. These tentative conclusions can be drawn from a more detailed examination of BiH exports in terms of technology and demand for labor according to different skills' levels. In order to analyze the latter, we apply different taxonomies addressing various features of activities involved in production.9 As will be shown below, the conclusions drawn from BiH foreign trade statistics may not be worth more than their quality. The results of applying the taxonomy, developed by Landesman and Stehrer (2003), point in the same direction, i.e., towards the absence of a significant shift towards hightech intensiveactivities. 9 The goodness of results obtained hinges critically on the quality of a classification used to examine export baskets over time by factor and technology mix. The choice is always controversial. There are woeful difficulties to define and measure factor intensity, level of technology involved and trade theorists have long wrestled with it. Some definitions of the groups of goods by factor intensity are overlapping and nonexhaustive. Definitions used here do not suffer from these shortcomingsall industries are taken into account and an industry appears only in one classification; and the classification distinguishes among four types of factors. Since some industries are intensive in terms of more than one factor, the results may be distorted. But even assuming that the initial classification captures adequately factor proportions at a given point of time, with the passage of time it may provide a distorted picture. Some industries may become more capitalintensive or less active in technological and other terms. 23 | P a g e Landesman and Stehrer (2003) divide twodigit SITC product groups into three broad categories: (1) low technology and labor intensive activities including among others agricultural products, textiles and clothing, footwear, some chemicals, tires; (2) resource intensive activities including, among others, manmade fibers, wood and wood products, coke, refined petroleum products and nuclear fuels, mineral products, and chemicals; and (3) medium to hightechnology production activities which include, among others, machinery and equipment, transport equipment, and electrical and optical equipment, pharmaceuticals, etc. Exports of resourceintensive products posted the largest increase over 200307, whereas exports of lowtech, laborintensive products recorded the slowest growth. Their share in total declined 7 percentage points, while the share of resource intensive exports increased 7 percentage points in 2007 over 2003 (Table 14). Table 14: Technology content of BiH foreign trade in 2003 and 2007 (in percent) Share in total Index 2007 Share in total Index 2007 Exports in terms exports imports of imports 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 2007 Lowtech, labor intensive 31 24 77 29% 24% 85 23% 33% Resource intensive 46 53 116 38% 46% 119 40% 53% Medium to Hightech 23 22 97 33% 30% 91 28% 36% Source: Own calculations based on BiH's trading partners reporting to UN COMTRADE database. Interestingly, the composition of imports has moved in the same direction indicating slower growth in import demand for medium to high tech products and lowtech labor intensive products. The latter appears to be the result of domestic production substituting imports, as the export coverage of imports of low tech products has posted the largest increase despite the contraction in their share in total exports. Yet, the export coverage of lowtech imports has remained lower than those of other product groups The share of resource intensive products reached almost half of total imports while their export coverage also significantly increased by around onethird to 53 percent in 2007. The contraction in the share of medium to hightech products in total imports, albeit a very small one, raises some concerns about future competitiveness of BiH exports. The share of these products in total imports fell from 33 percent in 2003 to 30 percent in 2007. These products include among others capital equipment goods, whose share in total BiH imports also fell from 18 percent in 2003 to 17 percent in 2007. Note that a 17 percent share is rather low: in Bulgaria's imports, for instance, the share of machinery was on average 20 percent in 200103. 24 | P a g e The change in terms of trade in favor of resource intensive products and the shift away from EU markets might have exaggerated the role of resourceintensive products in BiH exports. Prices of raw materials and resource intensive products like, for instance, steel, bauxite and aluminum, have increased visāvis many manufactures. In consequence, their volumes might have increased less than their exports in value terms. Furthermore, the rise in price of raw materials exported mainly to SEE5 countries may be a major factor explaining the fall in the share of the EU27 in total exports from 76 percent in 2003 to 63 percent in 2006 and 59 percent in 2007.10 Indeed, there are two different pictures of the development in technology and labor content of EUoriented and ROWoriented exports. Since the EU foreign trade statistics rank among the best in the world, and the EU takes more than half of BiH total exports, the conclusions drawn on their base may reflect closer the actual reality of BiH sources of improved competitiveness. Running the EU data through Landesman's and Stehrer's filter yields a completely different result. The share of BiH exports characterized by lowtechnology, labor intensive production processes significantly fell in 200307, whereas the share of medium to hightech products increased almost 20 percent. EUoriented exports of these products posted the strongest growth with their value of almost threetimes higher in 2007 than in 2003. In marked contrast, the dominance of resource intensive products in ROWoriented exports significantly expanded from 55 percent of the total ROWdestined exports in 2003 to 68 percent in 2007. The share of both lowtech, unskilled labor intensive and medium to hightech intensive products in ROWdestined exports dramatically contracted in this period; the latter posted a larger reduction than the former (Table 15). Table 15: Technology content of EU and ROW imports from BiH in 2003 and 2007 (in percent and millions of US dollars) EU-27 Index 2007 ROW Index 2007 Share of EU in total Index 2007 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 2007 2003=100 Low-tech, labor intensive 33.4 28.9 87 23.0 16.1 70 82.1 72.3 88 Resource intensive 43.0 43.2 100 54.6 68.0 124 71.3 48.0 67 Medium to High-tech 22.7 27.0 119 21.8 14.5 66 76.6 73.0 95 Total 100 100 100 100 100 100 75.9 59.2 78 Source: Own calculations based on EU reporting to UN COMTRADE database. Exports to the EU not only provide a stimulus to industrial restructuring and moving up the value added but are also critical to creating and retaining highly paid jobs in BiH. While nothing short of 10 Calculations are based on partners' statistics reported to the UN COMTRADE database, which are not complete for 2007 at the time of this writing. 25 | P a g e surveys of exporters could give precise information on wages of those involved in exportoriented industrial activities, some insights can be obtained from an examination of the exports content in terms of labor skills. Higher skills tend to be better rewarded: hence the shift toward products requiring high labor skills would indicate also the shift towards higher paid jobs.11 In order to shed light on labor skills underlying BiH exports, we use a taxonomy developed by Austrian Institute of Economic Research (Peneder 1999). It classifies twodigit SITC items in terms of embodiments in labor skills. Four levels of skills are distinguished: products requiring lowskill labor (e.g., most foods and feeds, fabrics, iron and steel, nonferrous metals, clothing, footwear); medium skill bluecollar (e.g., energy, vegetable oils and fats, wood products, automobiles, and other vehicles); medium skill whitecollar (e.g., fertilizers, cosmetics, paper articles, power generating equipment, telecommunication and electrical equipment, scientific instruments); and highskill labor intensive sectors (e.g., pharmaceuticals, industry special machines, metalworking machinery, industrial equipment, office and data processing machines). Table 16 presents the results of this analysis. Table 16: Labor content of BiH exports and EU imports from BiH in terms of skill in 2003 and 2007 (in percent) EU-27 Index, 2007 ROW Index, 2007 Share of the EU Index 2007 Level of labor skills 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 2007 2003=100 2003 2007 2003=100 Low-skill 58.5 53.4 91 48.6 58.2 120 79.1 57.1 72 Medium skill blue-collar 27.1 25.6 94 34.5 25.2 73 71.3 59.5 84 Medium skill white-collar 9.7 8.8 90 11.8 11.9 100 72.1 51.8 72 High-skill 3.8 11.4 300 4.5 3.2 71 72.6 83.7 115 Source: Own calculations based on BiH trading partners' reporting to UN COMTRADE database. The contrast between two export baskets--EU27 versus ROW--has become huge five years into the current export expansion phase. While EUoriented exports in 2003 created more employment opportunities for lowskill labor force, ROWoriented exports were characterized by the presence of labor with higher skills: the share lowskill labor products in EUdestined exports was 59 percent as compared to 49 percent in ROWoriented exports (Table 16). By 2007, the change has been rather dramatic: the share of lowskill labor intensive products in ROW exports increased to 58 percent and that in EUoriented exports fell to 53 percent. Products using highskill labor have been the main lever of BiH export growth in 200307, although their share in total exports has remained relatively low. The share of highskill labor in total 11 Wages in the BiH industrial sector were in 2005 among the highest in the region: only those employed in Croatia earned more. The ratio of wages of skilled to unskilled was 1.4 in 2005 (MIGA 2006). 26 | P a g e exports increased from 4 percent in 2003 to 8 percent in 2007 with the shares of other categories of labor slightly contracting. Mediumskilled blue collar jobs appear to have been more affected, as their share overall fell from 29 percent in 2003 to 25 percent in 2007. The highskill labor intensive sectors have posted the strongest export growth. The value of their EUoriented exports increased from US$ 35 million in 2003 to US$ 237 million in 2007, with exports of industrial equipment (SITC 74) leading the pack: the value grew from US$ 22 million to US$ 193 million in this period. Concluding observations In spite of weaknesses in the investment and business climate, BiH exporters have posted one of the strongest growth rates and the largest increase in the share in world trade among SEE6 economies during the current export expansion phase. They outperformed in world markets not only suppliers from SEE but also from other countries. Traditional manufacturing and resourcebased industries continue to tower over BiH's export basket and display strong comparative advantage. Yet, there are some signs of the emergence of more sophisticated exportoriented activities pointing to an increased participation of BiH manufacturers in global supply chains. BiH export growth performance during its current expansion phase has been characterized by: Strong growth across all sectors of the BiH economy. It was broadly based with all double­digit SITC sectors having had expanded exports of their products, albeit at a different pace. Greater use of skilled labor, especially visible in EU imports from BiH, indicating that the gap between factor content of BiH exports and its endowments in skilled labor force, characteristic of postwar recovery phase, appears to have been partly closed. Increase in the export coverage of goods in terms of their imports. As a result, BiH has made a huge step towards improved financial sustainability of external performance. The growing diversity in export offer. This points to the depth of industrial restructuring and increased level of processing embodied in exports, as indirectly revealed in trading partners' import statistics. Strong growth of capital and skilled laborintensive products associated also with the entry of BiH firms into global production networks (almost exclusively automotive). And an increased presence of firms with foreign capital. Like in other transition economies, they tend to display, as a rule, strong export orientation and higher technology content. The current expansionary phase bears some resemblance to the second wave of export growth of Central Europe, albeit with two caveats. Both have significant implications weakening benefits associated with the presence of foreign firms. The first is that Central European economies at this stage had mostly zeroed customs duties on industrial imports from the EU. In consequence, firms had to 27 | P a g e compete on equal footing with exporters from the EU: they did not have duties on imports of machinery and other industrial inputs originating in the EU. The second caveat concerns the modality of FDI establishing presence in a country. The similarity is in the role played by firms with foreign capital in transformation of the economy, whereas the difference is in the dominance of subsidiaries of major multinational corporations in most Central European transition countries except for Slovenia. While we do not have reliable data, joint ventures appear to be a major mode of entry of foreign firms into BiH. Interviews and examination of the database containing information on major exporters would suggest that this is indeed the case. The drawback of joint ventures is that they are much weaker in transfer of knowhow and new technologies. The latter may explain the absence of a visible shift toward activities with higher technology content. Indeed, it seems that exports of engineering sectors constituting what once was the heart of the Yugoslav auto components industry remain below their potential. The preferences accorded by tariff policy to car assembly continue to distort the development of this sector. Poland followed a similar path in the early 1990s: the price of this policy was a delayed entry into global automotive networks of production and distribution, which happened only under the pressure of tariff liberalization on imports from the EU stipulated by the European Association Agreement. Until the interim trade agreement of the SAA goes into effect, the BiH authorities will not be under a similar pressure. Considering available human capital and BiH industrial tradition, the price tag for these policyinduced distortions may be quite high. Another important conclusion derived from the empirical analysis of BiH foreign trade performance is the importance of EU markets. Access to EU markets offers BiH producers a unique opportunity to establish internationally competitive operations relying on a higher R&D and know how component and using labor with higher skills. This is critical to the modernization of BiH's industrial base. Understandably, access to CEFTA 2006 markets does not offer similar opportunities as inter industry trade still remains a dominant mode of trade interaction. 28 | P a g e References EC 2007: Bosnia and Herzegovina 2007 Progress Report. Commission Staff Working Document, Commission of the European Communities, Brussels, 6 November. FIPA 2003: Auto Components Industry: Bosnia and Herzegovina. Profile Report, Foreign Investment Promotion Agency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo, December. Garibaldi, P., N. Mora, R. Sahay and J. Zettelmeyer. 2002. ,,What Moves Capital to Transition Economies?" IMF Working Paper, WP/02/64. Washington, D.C. Hadziomegaric, A., M. Jakubiak, N. Oruc, and W. Paszynski. 2007. "Regional Free Trade Agreements of Bosnia and Herzegovina: analysis and policy recommendations." CASE Reports No. 69/2007, Center for Social and Economic Research, Warsaw. Hill, J. 1989. "Comparing transnational production systems: The automobile industry in the USA and Japan." International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 13(3): 462480. Hayden, R.M. 1995. "The 1995 Agreements on Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Dayton Constitution: The Political Utility of a Constitutional Illusion," East European Constitutional Review, vol.4, no.4, Fall. Kaminski, B. 2007. "Outsourcing and Industrial Restructuring. New Europe's Success," in E. Pauss, ed., Global Capitalism Unbound: Winners and Losers from Offshore Outsourcing, Palgrave, London. Kaminski, B., and F. Ng. 2005. "Production Disintegration and Integration of Central Europe into Global Markets," International Review of Economics and Finance, 14, 2005. Kaminski, B. and B. Smarzynska. 2001. "Integration into global production and distribution networks through FDI: The case of Poland." Communist Economies & Economic Transformation, Vol. 13. No. 4. Kaminski B., Z.K. Wang, and L.A. Winters. 1996. "Export performance in transition economies." Economic Policy, October. Karthuria, S. (ed). 2008. Western Balkans Integration and the EU: An Agenda for Trade and Growth, The World Bank, Washington D.C. Kaufmann D., A. Kraay, and M. Mastruzzi. 2007. Governance Matters VI: Governance Indicators for 1996 2006 at http://info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi2007/ Landesmann, M. and R. Stehrer. 2003. "Structural Patterns of EastWest European Integration: Strong and Weak Gershenkron Effects, in WIIW Structural Report 2003 on Central and Eastern Europe, Vol. 1, The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, Vienna. MIGA 2006: Investment Horizons: Western Balkans. A Study of Foreign Direct Investment Costs and Conditions in Automotive Component Manufacturing and Food/Beverage Processing in Five Countries. May MFTER 2007: A Trade Related Needs Assessment, A project implemented by Maxwell Stamp, PLC for EUTPP and Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Relations, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo, November. 29 | P a g e Peneder, M. 1999. "Intangible Investment and Human Resources: The New WIFO Taxonomy of Manufacturing Industry." WIFO Working Paper No. 114, Austrian Institute of Economic Research, Vienna. Silajdzic, S. 2007. "Patterns of restructuring and competitiveness of the BiH manufacturing industry and the role of technological capabilities." Mimeo, accessed on August 9,2008 on the Web at http://english.ecorys.nl/dmdocuments/Silajdzic%20%20BiH%20manufacturing%20industry.pdf USAID 2006: Forest & Wood Sector Review--Bosnia and Herzegovina: A Rapid Survey of Forest Resources, Policy, Legislation, Institutions, and the Wood Processing Industry. Sarajevo, January. WB 2005: Bosnia and Herzegovina: Country Economic Memorandum. Report No. 29500BA, World Bank, Washington D.C. May. 30 | P a g e Annex Table 1: Products in terms of Harmonized System sixdigit items identified according to different levels of processing Logging (logs) 440110 Fuel wood, in logs, in billets, in 440122 Nonconiferous 440130 Sawdust and wood waste and scrap, w 440200 Wood charcoal (including shell or n Primary wood processing 440310 Treated with paint, stains, creosot 440320 Other, coniferous 440391 Of oak (Quercus spp.) 440392 Of beech (Fagus spp.) 440399 Other 440410 Coniferous 440420 Nonconiferous 440690 Other Secondary wood processing 440710 Coniferous 441219 Other 440724 Virola, Mahogany (Swietenia spp.), 441223 Other, containing at least one laye 440729 Other 441229 Other 440791 Of oak (Quercus spp.) 441299 Other 440792 Of beech (Fagus spp.) 441300 Densified wood, in blocks, plates, 440799 Other 441400 Wooden frames for paintings, photog 440810 Coniferous 441510 Cases, boxes, crates, drums and sim 440831 Dark Red Meranti, Light Red Meranti 441520 Pallets, box pallets and other load 440839 Other 441600 Casks, barrels, vats, tubs and othe 440890 Other 441700 Tools, tool bodies, tool handles, b 440910 Coniferous 441810 Windows, Frenchwindows and their fr 440920 Nonconiferous 441820 Doors and their frames and threshol 441029 Other 441830 Parquet panels 441039 Other 441840 Shuttering for concrete constructio 441090 Other 441850 Shingles and shakes 441111 Not mechanically worked or surface 441890 Other 441119 Other 441900 Tableware and kitchenware, of wood. 441121 Not mechanically worked or surface 442010 Statuettes and other ornaments, of 441129 Other 442090 Other 441131 Not mechanically worked or surface 442110 Clothes hangers 441139 Other 442190 Other 441191 Not mechanically worked or surface 450190 Other 441199 Other 450310 Corks and stoppers 441213 With at least one outer ply of trop 450390 Other 441214 Other, with at least one outer ply 450410 Blocks, plates, sheets and strip; t 940130 Swivel seats with variable height a 450490 Other 940140 Seats other than garden seats or ca 940330 Wooden furniture of a kind used in 940150 Seats of cane, osier, bamboo or sim 940340 Wooden furniture of a kind used in 940161 Upholstered 940350 Wooden furniture of a kind used in 940169 Other 940360 Other wooden furniture 940180 Other seats 940370 Furniture of plastics 940190 Parts for all kinds of seats 940380 Furniture of other materials, inclu 940390 Parts 31 | P a g e Other wood based products 480100 Newsprint, in rolls or sheets. 481099 Other 480220 Paper and paperboard of a kind used 481110 Tarred, bituminised or asphalted pa 480254 Weighing less than 40 g/mē 481141 Selfadhesive 480255 Weighing 40 g/mē or more but not mo 481149 Other 480256 Weighing 40 g/mē or more but not mo 481190 Other paper, paperboard, cellulose 480257 Other, weighing 40 g/mē or more but 481200 Filter blocks, slabs and plates, of 480258 Weighing more than 150 g/mē 481310 In the form of booklets or tubes 480261 In rolls 481320 In rolls of a width not exceeding 5 480262 In sheets with one side not exceedi 481390 Other 480269 Other 481420 Wallpaper and similar wall covering 480300 Toilet or facial tissue stock, towe 481490 Other 480411 Unbleached 481610 Carbon or similar copying papers 480419 Other 481620 Selfcopy paper 480421 Unbleached 481690 Other 480429 Other 481710 Envelopes 480431 Unbleached 481720 Letter cards, plain postcards and c 480439 Other 481810 Toilet paper 480441 Unbleached 481820 Handkerchiefs, cleansing or facial 480449 Other 481830 Tablecloths and serviettes 480451 Unbleached 481840 Sanitary towels and tampons, napkin 480459 Other 481850 Articles of apparel and clothing ac 480511 Semichemical fluting paper 480512 Straw fluting paper 481890 Other 480519 Other 481910 Cartons, boxes and cases, of corrug 480524 Weighing 150 g/mē or less 481920 Folding cartons, boxes and cases, o 480525 Weighing more than 150 g/mē 481930 Sacks and bags, having a base of a 480530 Sulphite wrapping paper 481940 Other sacks and bags, including con 480540 Filter paper and paperboard 481950 Other packing containers, including 480550 Felt paper and paperboard 481960 Box files, letter trays, storage bo 480591 Weighing 150 g/mē or less 482010 Registers, account books, note book 480592 Weighing more than 150 g/mē but les 482020 Exercise books 480593 Weighing 225 g/mē or more 482030 Binders (other than book covers), f 480620 Greaseproof papers 482040 Manifold business forms and interle 480630 Tracing papers 482050 Albums for samples or for collectio 480640 Glassine and other glazed transpare 482090 Other 480700 Composite paper and paperboard (mad 482110 Printed 480810 Corrugated paper and paperboard, wh 482190 Other 480820 Sack kraft paper, creped or crinkle 482210 Of a kind used for winding textile 480830 Other kraft paper, creped or crinkl 482290 Other 480890 Other 482312 Selfadhesive 480910 Carbon or similar copying papers 482319 Other 480920 Selfcopy paper 482320 Filter paper and paperboard 480990 Other 482340 Rolls, sheets and dials, printed fo 481013 In rolls 482360 Trays, dishes, plates, cups and the 481014 In sheets with one side not exceeding 482370 Moulded or pressed articles of pape 481019 Other 482390 Other 481022 Lightweight coated paper 490900 Printed or illustrated postcards; p 481029 Other 491000 Calendars of any kind, printed, inc 481031 Bleached uniformly throughout the m 491110 Trade advertising material, commerc 481032 Bleached uniformly throughout the m 491191 Pictures, designs and photographs 481039 Other 491199 Other 481092 Multiply 32 | P a g e Annex Table 2: Trade in automotive network of production in 200207 (in million of US dollars and percent) Trade Value ($ million) LSG (%) SITCR3 Product 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 200207 Exports of Auto Parts & Final Products 7132 Motor veh. i/c pistn engines 1.2 0.0 1.4 0.2 0.4 1.0 16.0 7139 Parts nes intc engines 5.1 59.1 103.1 155.4 164.5 156.9 58.9 74419 Pts nes of work trucks 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.0 53.8 77831 Ignition/starting equipment 2.6 1.7 2.3 1.8 2.3 3.1 4.7 77833 Ignition/starting parts 0.6 1.0 1.5 1.8 1.5 4.1 32.8 7843 Motor veh part/acces nes 5.9 8.1 16.8 31.7 40.8 36.7 41.9 Subtotal Auto parts network 17.1 70.3 126.9 192.3 211.3 204.9 46.1 7812 Pass motor veh, exc buses 0.9 1.4 8.9 1.6 1.5 4.3 18.0 7821 Goods transport vehicles 0.3 0.1 1.7 2.0 1.3 2.5 47.7 Subtotal Auto network final products 2.5 2.7 13.0 6.7 8.3 18.0 36.1 Total Auto network: parts & final gds 19.6 73.0 139.9 199.0 219.6 222.9 45.2 Share in total exports (%) 1.7 5.8 7.0 7.6 6.7 5.8 Imports of Auto Parts & Final Products 6251 Tyres new for motor car 9.5 12.4 16.8 19.0 19.5 25.3 18.2 6252 Tyres,new,bus or lorry 6.1 7.9 10.9 12.4 9.8 12.2 12.2 7132 Motor veh. i/c pistn engines 3.6 0.7 4.0 7.2 7.3 9.4 35.7 7138 Int comb piston engs nes 0.6 1.0 1.5 0.9 0.8 1.1 4.5 7139 Parts nes intc engines 4.9 5.4 22.1 49.8 32.7 75.0 56.7 77831 Ignition/starting equipment 0.9 0.8 1.7 1.5 1.5 1.4 11.6 77833 Ignition/starting parts 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.9 0.4 0.7 21.0 77834 Veh elect light/etc equ. 1.1 0.7 1.2 1.2 1.5 1.9 13.1 77835 Veh elect light/etc part 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.5 0.5 0.8 21.3 7841 Motor veh chassis+engine 0.2 0.1 0.3 0.1 0.7 0.0 20.1 7842 Motor vehicle bodies 13.0 1.7 12.7 29.6 30.6 41.4 43.6 7843 Motor veh part/acces nes 27.1 26.8 42.8 54.0 57.0 69.8 20.7 Subtotal Auto parts network 68.8 59.1 115.7 178.5 163.6 241.0 27.9 7812 Pass motor veh, exc buses 61.2 71.8 104.7 134.9 141.9 226.4 25.3 7821 Goods transport vehicles 29.9 33.2 50.2 71.3 53.0 73.9 17.9 7822 Specialuse vehicles nes 2.8 4.1 9.5 7.7 5.7 13.8 25.0 7831 Buses etc 12.8 11.3 12.4 16.1 11.6 15.5 3.7 7832 Semitrailer tractors 11.1 13.5 20.2 25.4 16.2 43.7 21.8 7441 Goods trucks/tractors/etc 4.7 4.4 5.4 6.5 7.7 9.3 15.2 7851 Motorcycles/mopeds 0.6 1.0 1.2 1.2 1.3 2.6 23.9 Subtotal Auto network final products 139.7 156.9 229.7 305.8 262.7 421.4 21.0 Total Auto network: parts & final gds 208.4 216.0 345.4 484.3 426.3 662.4 23.3 Share in total imports (%) 6.2 6.0 6.8 8.2 6.9 8.5 Sources: Based on partners' data from UN COMTRADE Statistics.