Z
Zhi Wang
Researcher at Zhejiang University
Publications - 470
Citations - 12678
Zhi Wang is an academic researcher from Zhejiang University. The author has contributed to research in topics: China & Wireless sensor network. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 418 publications receiving 10488 citations. Previous affiliations of Zhi Wang include Chang'an University & World Bank Institute.
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Tracing Value-Added and Double Counting in Gross Exports
TL;DR: The authors proposed a framework for gross exports accounting that breaks up a country's gross exports into various value-added components by source and additional double counted terms, identifying which parts of the official trade data are double counted and the sources of the double counting.
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Tracing Value-Added and Double Counting in Gross Exports†
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed an accounting framework that breaks up a country's gross exports into various value-added components by source and additional double-counted terms, and integrated all previous measures of vertical specialization and value added trade into a unified framework.
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Give credit where credit is due: tracing value added in global production chains
TL;DR: In this article, a new conceptual framework is presented to measure sources of value-added trade by country in global production networks, with a parsimonious decomposition of gross exports that eliminates double counting.
ReportDOI
How much of chinese exports is really made in china? assessing domestic value-added when processing trade is pervasive
TL;DR: This article developed a general formula for computing domestic and foreign contents when processing exports are pervasive, and proposed a mathematical programming procedure to estimate these coefficients by combining information from detailed trade statistics with input-output tables.
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Estimating domestic content in exports when processing trade is pervasive
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a method for computing domestic and foreign contents that allows for processing trade and found that the share of domestic content in manufactured exports was about 50% before China's WTO membership, and has risen to nearly 60% since then.