Abstract : The objective of this paper is to show that part of the fixed cost of firms’ trade expansion is due to the
acquisition of new internal capabilities (e.g. technology, production processes or skills), which imply
a costly change in the firm’s internal labor organisation. We investigate the relationship between a
firm’s structure of labor, in terms of relative number of managers, and the scope of its export
portfolio, in terms of product-destination varieties. The empirical analysis is based on a matched
employer- employee dataset covering the population of French firms from tradable sectors over the
period 2009-2014. Our analysis suggests that market expansion, and in particular export diversification,
is associated with a change in the firm’s workforce composition, namely an increase in the number of
managerial layers and in the ratio of managers. We show how these results are consistent with a simple
model where the complexity of a firm’s operations increases in the number of product-destination
couples exported, and where managers’ role is to address the unsolved problems arising from such
increased complexity of operations