525 results
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2. Backhaul in 5G systems for developing countries: A literature review.
- Author
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Sawad, Inas, Nilavalan, Rajagopal, and Al‐Raweshidy, Hamed
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,LITERATURE reviews ,MOBILE satellite communication ,5G networks ,ECONOMIC development ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems - Abstract
The fifth‐generation (5G) technology is seen to be a solution for developing countries to improve their quality of services in terms of transportation, education, health, agriculture, and other fields, thereby holding the promises of economic transformation by improving productivity and the quality of life. The paper considers some of the challenges that face operators, investors, and providers when planning to introduce 5G technology to developing countries. The main focus of this paper is the 5G transport network, in particular, the backhaul network. The 5G transport network architectural options and scenarios are discussed based on several standards and previous studies, the problems of existing infrastructures of developing countries are investigated, and new proposed technologies that may help to address those challenges are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Financial development and economic complexity: The role of country stability.
- Author
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Ndoya, Hermann, Ongo Nkoa, Bruno Emmanuel, Kemeze, Francis Hypolite, and Nchofoung, Tii N.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,POLITICAL stability ,FINANCIAL security ,DEVELOPING countries ,FINANCIAL risk - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to examine the relationships between financial development (FD), economic complexity and country stability. To achieve this objective, this paper applies a finite mixture model to a sample of 92 developing countries over the period 1995–2018. The study posits that the effect of FD on economic complexity differs across groups of countries with similar but unobserved characteristics. The study finds that the effect of FD on economic complexity varies across four classes of countries, which differ according to their level of economic, political and financial stability. Furthermore, the study argues that stable countries are more likely to be in class 1, including more performing countries – that is, the group of countries where FD spurs economic complexity. This finding remains consistent even when alternative measures of FD and economic complexity are considered. Hence, efforts by developing countries to undertake sound reforms to reduce economic, political and financial risks could help leverage the benefits of FD in fostering the development of sophisticated and complex economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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4. Who cares about the UN General Assembly? National delegations size from 1993 to 2016.
- Author
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Vlcek, Vaclav
- Subjects
GREAT powers (International relations) ,INTERNATIONAL security ,DEVELOPING countries ,HUMAN rights ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The UN General Assembly is the central forum of world politics. While it formally allows the member states to delegate up to five representatives, the size of the national delegations is generally larger and significantly increases over time. In this paper, I explore the size of the national delegations to the General Assembly from 1993 to 2016. Generally, the major powers (USA, Russia) send the biggest delegations. Surprisingly, China sends significantly smaller delegations than it used to before 2008. Big delegations are also sent by some small (Sweden, Finland, Norway, Switzerland) or developing countries (Nigeria, Bangladesh). My analysis shows that national capacities and issue‐specific motivations drive up the delegation size. Although the issue‐specific explanations are relatively rare in UN‐related research (due to the general‐purpose nature of the organisation), I argue that human rights, international security, economic development, and UN governance are the agendas for which states care about the General Assembly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The effect of export composition on energy demand: A fresh evidence in the context of economic complexity.
- Author
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Can, Muhlis, Brusselaers, Jan, and Mercan, Mehmet
- Subjects
COINTEGRATION ,ENERGY consumption ,DEVELOPING countries ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,DEVELOPED countries ,ECONOMIC expansion ,DIVERSIFICATION in industry - Abstract
Energy is pivotal for sustainable economic growth. Undoubtedly, the role of the composition of the export basket (measured as economic complexity) is one of the crucial variables influencing energy consumption. Despite its importance, the existing body of literature does not intensively study the relationship between economic complexity and total energy consumption. Therefore, this study's primary aim was to examine the effect of economic complexity on energy consumption in a case study of 21 developed and 44 developing countries for the period 1971–2014. In this context, economic complexity expresses the level of sophistication of a country's export basket. This paper considers energy prices and income as explanatory variables in Durbin‐H panel cointegration analysis and applies a cointegration test with structural breaks to check for the long‐run relationships. For the long‐run estimations, we employ the augmented mean group method and dynamic seemingly unrelated regression. The findings reveal that economic complexity increases energy consumption in developing countries while it decreases energy consumption in developed countries. This is an important insight for countries concerned about their energy dependence. The diversification of their production and export baskets can reduce energy needs. The paper finally presents policy recommendations based on the empirical estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A Comment on: "Presidential Address: Demand‐Side Constraints in Development: The Role of Market Size, Trade, and (In)Equality," by Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Tristan Reed.
- Author
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Rodrik, Dani
- Subjects
PRICES ,POVERTY reduction ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
The article discusses a paper by Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Tristan Reed that explores the role of market size in economic development and poverty reduction. The paper argues that market size is a significant constraint on development and that conventional development policies may not be fully effective. The authors present evidence that supports their perspective and propose measures of market size. However, the article also highlights the potential negative effects of international integration on domestic producers and raises questions about the strong version of the argument. It suggests that other factors, such as macro policies and commodity prices, may have contributed to the recent economic growth and poverty reduction in developing countries. The article concludes by discussing the changing global context and the need to focus on domestic demand for sustained economic development. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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7. Introduction.
- Author
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Kasekende, Louis
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DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The article discusses various reports published within the issue including one by Alan Gelb et al which discusses the performance of different groups of countries with an emphasis on better-performing low-income countries and another by Ji Hong Kim which examines Korea's economic development.
- Published
- 2007
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8. Exploring the driving mechanism and the evolution of the low‐carbon economy transition: Lessons from OECD developed countries.
- Author
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Yu, Bolin, Fang, Debin, Kleit, Andrew N., and Xiao, Kun
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,TRANSITION economies ,CARBON emissions ,ECONOMIC change ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The low‐carbon transition involves achieving the coordinated development between economic development and carbon reduction. This paper utilises an integrated decomposition and econometric framework to reveal the influence mechanism and convergence evolution of carbon emission intensity (CEI) across 29 OECD countries in the period 1992–2018. The country‐level low‐carbon transition efforts are then investigated. The results imply that: (1) The reduction in CEI is primarily attributed to the changes in economic development and energy intensity. The carbon emission coefficient effect also negatively influences CEI. The impact of energy consumption per capita, however, is negligible. (2) According to econometric analysis, energy intensity, energy mix, carbon emissions per capita and energy use per capita have positive impacts on CEI. Specially, GDP per capita shows an inverted U‐shaped curve relationship with CEI. (3) There is evidence of convergence in CEI across developed countries. Energy intensity plays a crucial role in accelerating the CEI convergence process, implying a half‐life of 3 years. (4) Fifteen European countries have made strong low‐carbon transition efforts among all countries. Denmark has made the largest efforts, South Korea the least. This study provides important implications for low‐carbon economy transition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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9. Cooperatives and economic growth in a developing country: The case of Nepal.
- Author
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Paudel, Ramesh C. and Acharya, Chakra Pani
- Subjects
ECONOMIC expansion ,DEVELOPING countries ,CAPITAL stock ,COOPERATIVE societies ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Cooperatives play important role in economic development via multiple channels, particularly, in developing countries' cases. Considering this fact, Nepal's constitution 2017 has incorporated the cooperative as one of the three pillars of her economy. This paper aims to analyze the role of cooperatives in the economic development of Nepal. For this, first, this paper documents the trend and pattern of Nepalese cooperatives' evolving structure, then moves to the econometric estimation to analyze the role of cooperatives in economic growth employing an advanced methodology. Looking at the properties of time series data for the period of 49 years from 1970 to 2018, the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) approach of cointegration is employed. The major finding is that the development of the cooperatives has a long‐run relationship with economic growth. However, the focus should be seen as on the involvement of many people in the cooperatives' activities rather than just on amassing the cooperatives' capital. The results also suggest that there is a need for the attention of policymakers so ensure that share capital contributes to economic growth. Therefore, the areas of priorities and scope of work of cooperatives need to be reconsidered when formulating new policies related to cooperatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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10. Fair trade, business and sustainable development.
- Author
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Young, William and Utting, Karla
- Subjects
UNFAIR competition ,SUSTAINABLE development ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
Fair trade has never been more popular, with worldwide sales soaring. This editorial to the special issue of Sustainable Development on ‘Fair trade, business and sustainable development’ introduces the topic and papers within the special issue. It discusses the success of the ‘fairtrade’ brand and the impacts of fair trade schemes as well as the future of the brand. The paper concludes that this alternative trading system does work in practical terms and in helping marginalized producers in developing countries. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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11. The way to sustainable development through income equality: The impact of trade liberalisation and financial development.
- Author
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Gharleghi, Behrooz and Jahanshahi, Asghar Afshar
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INCOME inequality ,DEVELOPING countries ,FREE trade ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMERCE ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The main aim of this paper is to examine the threshold impact of financial development and trade liberalization on income inequality as a measure of sustainable development in a sample of developed and developing countries using panel threshold analysis. Two major dimensions of financial development are considered: liquid liabilities and stock market capitalization. The empirical results revealed that financial development reduces income inequality only in countries where their GDP per capita is above ~US$11,000. It has no significant impact in reducing inequality in developing countries. This implies that institutional reforms in less developed and developing countries are necessary in order to reap the gains from financial development. Trade liberalization is found to have a positive impact on income inequality for both country groups—that is, trade benefits have worsened the income distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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12. Corporate Tax in Developing Countries: Current Trends and Design Issues.
- Author
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Abramovsky, Laura, Klemm, Alexander, and Phillips, David
- Subjects
CORPORATE taxes ,INCOME tax ,ECONOMIC development ,TAX incentives ,PRICE inflation ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper looks at corporate income taxes in developing countries from both an empirical and a theoretical perspective. Many economic principles about corporate income taxes apply equally in advanced and developing economies, but some characteristics of developing economies lead to different trade-offs. These include fewer locational rents and generally lower administrative capacity. Empirically, corporate income tax developments broadly resemble those in advanced economies, but there are important differences too, such as a greater reliance on tax incentives, reflected in a gradual narrowing - rather than broadening - of tax bases in combination with tax cuts. Detailed analysis using effective tax rates reveals various distortions including a preference for certain assets, and strong tax advantages of debt finance over equity finance, particularly in high-inflation environments. An empirical analysis of correlations between country-specific features and the likelihood of using tax incentives shows that countries offering low tax rates also tend to offer tax incentives, but that they cut their standard rates by substantially less than other countries between 1996 and 2007. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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13. Examining regional asymmetries in drivers of international migration flows.
- Author
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Nanda, Anupam and Oladiran, Olayiwola
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Migration is key to economic development, with varying implications and uneven impacts on origin and destination regions. This paper examines the variation in the major drivers of migration within and across continental blocs and the OECD in a gravity framework. The empirical model uses bilateral migration flow data for 182 countries over a 25 year period (1990–2015) while controlling for push and pull drivers of migration. The novelty of the study rests in the added dimension of the variation in the impact of migration drivers that is based on the direction of migration flow. The results suggest that migration drivers vary significantly across several economic blocs based in different regions and OECD countries. We find that the weight and significance of the impact of migration drivers vary significantly based on the direction of flow across continental blocs and the OECD, although some similarities exist in some regions regardless of the direction of migration flow. The results specifically show that economic and socio‐cultural drivers of migration are strongest when migration originates in continents dominated by developing countries and terminates in other continents, compared to migration that originates and terminates within the continents. This raises some anomalies and several issues of potential policy intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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14. GENDER INEQUALITY AND ECONOMIC GROWTH: A CRITICAL REVIEW.
- Author
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Cuberes, David and Teignier, Marc
- Subjects
GENDER inequality ,ECONOMIC development ,MACROECONOMICS ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The link between gender inequality and economic growth is a topic that is of growing interest, both in the academic literature and the policy arena. In this paper, we survey the literature that analyses this relationship from a macroeconomic perspective. We argue that that the existing theories provide a wide range of mechanisms through which these two variables may affect each other but also that more work needs to be carried out to obtain quantitative predictions out of these models. In the empirical arena, we note the lack of connection between most studies and the existing theories described earlier. In both cases, we propose approaches to alleviate these problems. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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15. Aid, Policies, and Growth in Developing Countries: A New Look at the Empirics.
- Author
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Alvi, Eskander, Mukherjee, Debasri, and Shukralla, Elias Kedir
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INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC policy ,ECONOMIC indicators ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIES of scale ,EMERGING markets ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations - Abstract
The relationship between foreign aid and economic growth has been the subject of much controversy. A recent theme suggesting that aid promotes growth, but only in a good policy environment has ratchet up that debate. In this paper, we assess the importance of policy and aid in generating growth when the aid, policy, and growth relationship is nonlinear. This allows us to examine the varying effects of aid and policy in different data segments, which we do without imposing any particular structure on the underlying relationship. We find that policy is an important determinant of growth. We also find partial corroboration of the view that aid is growth enhancing in a good policy environment, and some evidence of diminishing returns to aid. These findings suggest that nonlinearities if not appropriately addressed fail to capture the detailed underlying dynamics and thereby mask some key features of the aid-policy-growth relationship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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16. The impact of institutions on entrepreneurial activity.
- Author
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Stephen, Frank H., Urbano, David, and van Hemmen, Stefan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC activity ,ECONOMIC expansion ,ECONOMIC policy ,DEVELOPING countries ,INVESTORS - Abstract
This paper presents an empirical analysis of the factors which promote entrepreneurial activity across a number of transition, developing and developed countries. It produces results which highlight the importance of institutions in promoting entrepreneurial activity. This work is part of an on-going research project on the relationship between the legal system and factors which influence economic development. In particular, it has been shown that legal rules protecting creditors and investors influence the size of financial markets which in turn influence economic development. Our paper thus extends the analysis of the impact of institutions beyond that previously established to demonstrate its influence on another driver of economic development. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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17. Measuring the Labor Income Share of Developing Countries: Lessons From Social Accounting Matrices.
- Author
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van Treeck, Katharina
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL accounting ,NATIONAL income accounting ,LABOR ,INCOME - Abstract
This paper addresses the challenges of measuring the labor income share of developing countries. The poor availability and reliability of national account data as well as the fact that self‐employed—whose labor income is hard to capture—account for a major share of the workforce and often work in the informal sector render its computation difficult. Consequently, measuring the labor share requires assumptions. I consult social accounting matrices in addition to national account data to gain information on the production structure and self‐employed incomes in developing countries. The final data set covers about 90 developing countries from 1990 to 2011. The data suggest that the finding of declining labor shares of previous studies also applies to the sample of low and middle‐income countries. Furthermore, I find the labor share in developing countries to be about one‐half in size and hence less than the standard "two‐thirds" in economic literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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18. Economic Growth in Developing Countries: Is Landlockedness Destiny?
- Author
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Paudel, Ramesh C.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,LANDLOCKED states ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,RESOURCE curse ,ESTIMATION theory ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper examines the determinants of economic growth in developing countries within the standard growth regression framework, with special attention being paid to the experience of landlocked developing countries ( LLDCs). The results confirm that the landlockedness hampers economic growth, but the magnitude of negative impact is sensitive to alternative estimation methods. However, the analysis suggests that good governance, trade openness and coordinating infrastructure development with neighbours explain the significant aspect of the inter-country differences in growth rates among LLDCs. The results also suggest that African landlocked countries are not different from the other LLDCs. Contrary to the 'resource curse' hypothesis, natural resources seem to contribute to economic growth of LLDCs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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19. How does regulation affect the organizational form of foreign banks' presence in developing versus developed countries?
- Author
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Pamen Nyola, Annick, Sauviat, Alain, and Tarazi, Amine
- Subjects
FOREIGN banking industry ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,MIDDLE-income countries ,HIGH-income countries ,BANK capital ,CAPITAL requirements - Abstract
Using a unique hand‐collected dataset of 1,251 European Union banks and 20,850 foreign affiliates hosted in 154 countries, this paper investigates how both host country and home country regulations affect the decision on where and how to go abroad in developing countries as opposed to developed countries. We find that banks prefer high‐income countries with numerous activity restrictions and weaker supervision but less developed countries with less restrictions and stronger supervision. In all cases, they avoid locations with stronger capital regulation than at home. Regarding the choice of foreign organizational form (branches versus subsidiaries), banks rather operate subsidiaries in both high and middle‐income countries with stringent entry requirements but prefer branches in developing countries with stringent capital requirements and greater supervisory power. Our findings contribute to the literature examining bank internationalization and have several policy implications for regulatory reforms in developing and developed countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Reforming Property Rights Institutions in Developing Countries: Can FDI Inflows Help?
- Author
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Ganiou Mijiyawa, Abdoul'
- Subjects
PROPERTY rights ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,ECONOMIC reform ,FOREIGN investments ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper analyses factors that can facilitate property rights institutions reform in developing countries ( DC). Inspired by the works of North and Weingast ( Journal of Economic History, 49, 1989, 803) and Acemoglu et al. ( American Economic Review, 95, 2005a, 546; 2008) relating to the process of institutional reforms in England during the seventeenth century, I assume that FDI inflows could contribute to property rights reform in DC that are initially endowed with a minimum of effective institutions of constraints on the executive (i.e. effective institutions of checks and balances). Using five-year panel data over the period 1970-2005 with a sample of 80 DC, and after correcting for endogeneity, I find that conditioned on the initial level of constraints on the executive, the effect of FDI inflows on the probability of reforming property rights is positive and significant. The minimum level of constraints on the executive necessary for the catalytic role of FDI inflows in reforming property rights institutions is 3.6. Only 20 out of the 80 DC in the sample have this minimum level of constraints on the executive. Among the 20 countries five are in sub- Saharan Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Deploying Low-carbon Technologies in Developing Countries: A view from India's buildings sector.
- Author
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Khosla, Radhika, Sagar, Ambuj, and Mathur, Ajay
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,CONSTRUCTION industry ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The climate change arena comprises a diverse set of interacting actors from international, national and local levels. The multilevel architecture has implications for low-carbon technology deployment in developing countries, an issue salient to both development and climate objectives. The paper examines this theme through two inter-related questions: how do (or don't) low-carbon technologies get deployed in India's built environment, and what implications can be drawn from the Indian case for effective low-carbon technology development and transfer for developing countries? By examining the multilevel linkages in India's buildings sector, the paper shows how the interactions between governance levels can both support and hinder technology deployment, ultimately leading to inadequate outcomes. The potential of these linkages is hobbled by aspects of the national context (federated energy governance and developing-country capacity limitations), yet can also be enabled by other features (the climate policy context, which may motivate international actors to fill domestic capacity lacunae). Reflecting on the India case, the paper makes recommendations for improved low-carbon technology deployment in developing countries: (1) technology development and transfer collaboration on a 'need-driven' approach, (2) development of the specific types of capacity required across the entire innovation chain and (3) domestic strengthening of the coordination and agendas across and between governance levels. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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22. Characterisation of Economic Growth in Developing Economies with Informal Sector.
- Author
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Chattopadhyay, Subhasankar and Mondal, Rima
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,INFORMAL sector ,CAPITAL intensive industries ,MARKET equilibrium ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The paper presents a general equilibrium model of a developing economy with a capital intensive formal sector and a large informal sector with sector-specific capital to analyse the effects of investments on the sectoral returns to capital, sectoral wage rates, and composition of output and employment. Beginning with capital market disequilibrium (unequal sectoral rates of return) and labour market distortion (formal-informal wage gap), the model traces the evolution of the economy till capital market equilibrium is attained. The investments in the formal sector equalise the wages (a 'turning point' in growth à la Lewis) and reduces the size of the informal sector. The sectoral rates of returns equalise only if there is no factor intensity reversal, otherwise the economy specialises in the production of formal goods. The investments in the informal sector equalise the rates of return, do not affect the size of the formal sector and finally, a formal-informal wage gap persists provided factor intensities are not reversed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. ON THE PATH TO ECONOMIC GROWTH, DO REMITTANCES HELP? EVIDENCE FROM PANEL VARs.
- Author
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Cruz Zuniga, Martha
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,AUTOREGRESSION (Statistics) ,REMITTANCES ,ECONOMIC activity ,ECONOMIC conditions in developing countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Despite the emergence of remittances studies, knowledge about their effect on economic development is still ambiguous. This paper investigates the impact of remittances at macroeconomic level in developing countries controlling for endogeneity problems with the use of panel vector autoregression (panel VAR). The findings suggest that remittances have a positive, albeit small, impact on economic growth even without considering the role of institutions. When institutions are included, the pattern of response remains unaltered. A distinction between low versus high remittances participation in economic activity evidences that, although the impact of remittances on growth is similar, appreciation of the exchange rate occurs in economies with high remittances participation. Finally, a distinction by geographical region reveals that Eastern European economies receive the greatest benefit from these flows, followed by the Americas and Asia; however, African economic growth does not appear to have a statistically significant impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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24. Demographic influences on economic resiliency: Revisiting the developing country growth collapse of the 1970s and 1980s.
- Author
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Liddle, Brant
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,POPULATION ,DEMOGRAPHY ,RECESSIONS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper bridges two related, but up to now, unconnected literatures: economic growth stability and population-economic growth. The paper differs from previous population-economic growth analyses by focusing on instability of economic growth in developing countries. This study contributes to a previous paper on the developing country growth collapse by adding important demographic variables. The paper provides an explanation for 'new' negative correlations of population and economic growth: because 1960s were a relatively smooth time for economic growth, youth dependency did not seem important; however, during turbulent 1970s and 1980s, countries with falling dependency burdens weathered economic shocks better. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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25. Financial Openness and Growth: Short-run Gain, Long-run Pain?
- Author
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Bussière, Matthieu and Fratzscher, Marcel
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,FOREIGN investments ,CAPITAL movements ,ECONOMIC indicators ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
No empirical evidence has yet emerged for the existence of a robust positive relationship between financial openness and economic growth. This paper argues that a key reason for the elusive evidence is the presence of a time-varying relationship between openness and growth: countries tend to gain in the short term, immediately following capital account liberalization, but may not grow faster or even experience temporary growth reversals in the medium to long term. The paper finds substantial empirical evidence for the existence of such an intertemporal tradeoff for 45 industrialized and emerging market economies. The acceleration of growth immediately after liberalization is found to be often driven by an investment boom and a surge in portfolio and debt inflows. By contrast, the quality of domestic institutions, the size of FDI inflows and the sequencing of the liberalization process are found to be important driving forces for growth in the medium to longer term. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Public perceptions of Bhutan's approach to sustainable development in practice.
- Author
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Rinzin, Chhewang, Vermeulen, Walter J. V., and Glasbergen, Pieter
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development & the environment ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC geography ,ECONOMIC policy ,INDUSTRIAL organization (Economic theory) ,COMMERCIAL policy - Abstract
This paper focuses on the practical approach to sustainable development in Bhutan and specifically on public views on and experiences with the implementation of this strategy. Bhutan's development goal is ‘gross national happiness’. The strategy it has adopted to achieve this goal is known as the ‘middle path strategy’, which essentially addresses four sources (‘pillars’) of gross national happiness: economic development, ecological preservation, cultural preservation and good governance, without giving greater emphasis to any one pillar over the others. The paper is based on a survey conducted in 10 districts of Bhutan. Standard pre-designed questionnaires were used for interviews with representatives of three main groups in society: the state, civil society and the market. The results of this survey, the first of its kind to be carried out in the country, revealed that there is general agreement with the substance of the development strategy, although not everyone is fully aware of its scope and implications. A remarkable outcome of the survey, and one that contrasts with happiness studies conducted elsewhere in the world, was the high score for happiness in a country whose gross domestic product is so small. However, people do feel uncertain and the chosen development path is still fragile. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. FDI and Growth: What Causes What?
- Author
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Chowdhury, Abdur and Mavrotas, George
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMETRICS ,GROSS domestic product ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper examines the causal relationship between FDI and economic growth by using an innovative econometric methodology to study the direction of causality between the two variables. We apply our methodology, based on the Toda-Yamamoto test for causality, to time-series data covering the period 1969–2000 for three developing countries, namely Chile, Malaysia and Thailand, all of them major recipients of FDI with a different history of macroeconomic episodes, policy regimes and growth patterns. Our empirical findings clearly suggest that it is GDP that causes FDI in the case of Chile and not vice versa, while for both Malaysia and Thailand, there is a strong evidence of a bi-directional causality between the two variables. The robustness of the above findings is confirmed by the use of a bootstrap test employed to test the validity of our results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. What Interactions between Financial Globalization and Instability?—Growth in Developing Countries.
- Author
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Gaies, Brahim, Goutte, Stephane, and Guesmi, Khaled
- Subjects
FINANCIAL globalization ,ECONOMIC development ,EXTERNALITIES ,INVESTMENTS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper tests the effects of the impact of financial globalization on economic growth, examining its interaction with financial instability for a sample of 72 developing countries over the period 1972–2011, using dynamic panel estimator 'two‐step Generalized Method of Moments' (two‐step system GMM). The main results of the paper are the following: (i) financial instability and indebtedness‐globalization decrease growth; (ii) financial globalization and investment‐globalization increase growth; (iii) indebtedness‐globalization increases the effect of financial instability on growth; (iv) investment‐globalization decreases the effect of financial instability on growth; and (vi) financial globalization decreases the effect of financial instability on growth. These results are robust in a set of tests consisting of the insertion of alternative variables of financial instability, the inclusion of new control variables, inter alia an indicator of banking crises, using different time periods, and changing of the composition of the sample. © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Innovation, Imitation and Intellectual Property Rights in Developing Countries.
- Author
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Hwang, Hong, Wu, Jollene Z., and Yu, Eden S. H.
- Subjects
INNOVATIONS in business ,INTELLECTUAL property ,PROPERTY rights ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper sets up a vertically related market model in which imitation and innovation are endogenously determined to study the impact of intellectual property rights ( IPR) protection on less-developed countries. It shows how a less-developed country switches from imitation to innovation as it develops. It is also found that the relationship between IPR protection and economic development is U-shaped. The IPR protection tends to go down and then go up as income rises. This finding also conforms with that in the empirical literature on IPR protection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Inflation targeting adoption and institutional quality: Evidence from developing countries.
- Author
-
Minea, Alexandru, Tapsoba, René, and Villieu, Patrick
- Subjects
INFLATION targeting ,DEVELOPING countries ,PROPENSITY score matching ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Institutional quality is often emphasised as an engine of economic development in developing countries. However, most of the literature assumes that institutions are exogenous. In this paper, we adopt the opposite view, and study the way the design of the monetary regime, and specifically the adoption of an inflation targeting regime, can impact the quality of institutions. Using the propensity scores matching method, which allows controlling for self‐selection in policy adoption, along with a wide set of robustness checks, including GMM‐based estimations and controlling for unobserved heterogeneity, we find that the adoption of inflation targeting significantly improves the quality of institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Where to Locate? The Correlation Between Spatial Proximity and Location Choice of New Firms: The Case of Pakistan*.
- Author
-
Haroon, Maryiam and Chaudhry, Azam
- Subjects
ECONOMIES of agglomeration ,DEVELOPING countries ,BUSINESS enterprises ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The formation of new firms is an important determinant of regional economic development and agglomeration is a key factor affecting the formation and scale of operations of new firms. The present paper is among the first to explore the relationship between agglomeration economies (using localization and urbanization economies) and new firms' formation and scale of operations in a developing country. We make use of rich firm‐level data and find that agglomeration has a significant impact on the formation of new firms and their scale of operation in Punjab, Pakistan. Our findings also reveal that localization at all scales (small, medium and large) has a positive correlation with the arrival of new firms, while medium‐scale and large‐scale localization is positively correlated with the scale of operation of new firms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Strengthening implementation and utilization of nutrition interventions through research: a framework and research agenda.
- Author
-
Menon, Purnima, Covic, Namukolo M., Harrigan, Paige B., Horton, Susan E., Kazi, Nabeeha M., Lamstein, Sascha, Neufeld, Lynnette, Oakley, Erica, and Pelletier, David
- Subjects
MALNUTRITION in children ,CHILD mortality ,ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC health ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Undernutrition among women and children contributes to almost half the global burden of child mortality in developing countries. The impact of nutrition on economic development has highlighted the need for evidence-based solutions and yielded substantial global momentum. However, it is now recognized that the impact of evidence-based interventions is limited by the lack of evidence on the best operational strategies for scaling up nutrition interventions. With the goal of encouraging greater engagement in implementation research in nutrition and generating evidence on implementation and utilization of nutrition interventions, this paper brings together a framework and a broad analysis of literature to frame and highlight the crucial importance of research on the delivery and utilization of nutrition interventions. The paper draws on the deliberations of a high-level working group, an e-consultation, a conference, and the published literature. It proposes a framework and areas of research that have been quite neglected, and yet are critical to better understanding through careful research to enable better translation of global and national political momentum for nutrition into public health impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. How to assess economic progress in the era of discontinuity?
- Author
-
Hązła, Marceli and Mińska‐Struzik, Ewa
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,GLOBALIZATION ,DATA analysis - Abstract
The aim of this article is to contribute to the discussion on designing alternative economic development indices by measuring economic progress in the face of the discontinuity of globalisation. To this end, we use different evaluation criteria for the 'old' (1960–1990) and the 'new' (1990–2019) globalisation. First, the historical context that has shaped the contemporary globalisation processes is outlined, which makes it possible to identify the 1990s and the subsequent change in the structure of the world industrial production and the world GDP as the most important tipping point. Based on the observation that none of the existing indices sufficiently cover all the issues, a new pilot measure of economic progress is proposed, which takes into account two time periods: the old (1960–1990) and the new (1990–2019) globalisation. The analysis of the data sample of 18 countries (G6, I6 and selected LDCs) using this measure makes it possible to assign their economies to four categories, depending on the results they have achieved; the 'winners', the 'losers', the 'late‐bloomers' and the 'inmates of industry'. Furthermore, possible directions for the future research on the subject are indicated. The data set supporting this study has been made publicly available to help in its continuation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Does Microfinance Reduce Poverty among the Poorest? A Macro Quantile Regression Approach.
- Author
-
Lacalle‐Calderon, Maricruz, Perez‐Trujillo, Manuel, and Neira, Isabel
- Subjects
MICROFINANCE ,POVERTY reduction ,QUANTILE regression ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The goal of this paper is to provide empirical evidence to determine whether microfinance, measured through a country's gross loan portfolio per capita, has a heterogeneous effect on poverty reduction among countries with different levels of poverty. We have used a panel‐data quantile regression with a data set for 57 countries for the years 2005, 2008, and 2011 to estimate the distributional impacts of microcredits on two poverty indices. Results reveal not only that microfinance significantly reduces the incidence and depth of poverty, but also that this effect differs across the different poverty levels (quantiles). The effect of microcredit on poverty reduction is slightly larger among countries where the incidence and depth of poverty are the highest, suggesting that microcredit reaches and benefits even the poorest individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. JID 'Long run effects of Covid‐19 on developing countries' Special Issue Editorial Introduction.
- Author
-
Bandyopadhyay, Sanghamitra and Vadlamannati, Krishna
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,PANDEMICS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The developing world has experienced unprecedented effects of the Covid‐19 pandemic. The devastating effects of this major crisis are felt in all possible spheres of the developing world and with a serious impact on social and economic development in developing countries. The spread of Covid‐19, which has brought the world to a near standstill, has given rise to the question on the socioeconomic effects of the pandemic. The special issue on Covid‐19 at JID aims to bring together contemporary research on several aspects of how the devastating effects of the pandemic have panned out in different spheres of life, particularly, in the developing world. This special issue has 10 papers with a particular emphasis on evidence of the impact of the Covid‐19 pandemic in Sub‐Saharan Africa and South America. The volume documents studies on the effects of the pandemic at the macro‐level, for economy wide effects, the impact of the pandemic on firms and on its effects on households. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Multi-Sited Governance of Large-Scale Land Acquisitions: Mapping and Evaluating the Terrain.
- Author
-
German, Laura
- Subjects
REAL property acquisition ,ECONOMIC conditions in developing countries ,BIOMASS energy ,AGRICULTURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Recent spikes in commodity prices, the growing appetite for primary commodities among emerging economies, growing interest in biofuels and speculations over future returns to land and its products have led to a renewed interest in farmland in the global South. With highly publicized risks and polarized 'win-lose' narratives, so-called 'land grabbing' has become an important focus of transnational governance activity. In juxtaposition to those seeing large-scale land acquisitions as inherently risky or undesirable, some argue for the potential opportunities they engender-provided risks can be mitigated through improved governance. This paper explores this argument through a systematic analysis of the formal features of the multi-sited governance mechanisms in place to guide agricultural investment and govern its social and environmental effects. The intent is not to discount the importance of informal norms and practices or the so-called 'lived experience of governance,' nor the argument that such land acquisitions are inherently flawed irrespective of the 'discipline imposed on them.' Rather, the paper aims to explore the merits of the arguments advanced by the pro-investment camp, and to explore the extent to which the emerging global governance architecture is set up to deliver on the purported benefits of large-scale agricultural investment. Results suggest that serious weaknesses in the substantive scope, reach and/or implementation mechanisms in all of the reviewed governance mechanisms pose a serious risk to the likely effectiveness of the emerging governance architecture in minimizing risks and leveraging benefits. Addressing these weaknesses is an obvious first step for bolstering the credibility of those advocating that governance is the solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. REMITTANCES AS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY: STEPPING STONES OR SLIPPERY SLOPE?
- Author
-
Mughal, Mazhar Y.
- Subjects
REMITTANCES ,ECONOMIC development ,STRATEGIC planning ,POVERTY ,ECONOMIC competition ,ECONOMIC models - Abstract
Pakistan is one of the world's top 10 remittance receiving countries. This paper examines the potential for the use of remittances as a development strategy. Remittances to Pakistan do seem to promote growth and reduce economic inequality and poverty. However, they also cause the Dutch disease, are inflationary, and tend to be pro-cyclical. The paper describes the challenges in employing remittances as the cornerstone of the country's development model, particularly the loss in competitiveness, volatility and the development of a dependency mindset that high remittance inflows can foster. In the end, some steps are suggested that are needed to be taken in this regard. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Economic and Political Determinants of the Effects of FDI on Growth in Transition and Developing Countries.
- Author
-
Elkomy, Shimaa, Ingham, Hilary, and Read, Robert
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,HUMAN capital ,POLITICAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,TRANSITION economies ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This study investigates the role of human capital and political development in determining the magnitude of the effects of foreign direct investment ( FDI) on growth for a panel of 61 transition and developing countries for the period 1989 to 2013. A baseline growth model incorporating these variables is tested and then extended to include FDI interaction effects with human capital (measured using secondary school enrollment data) and political development (based on Economist Intelligence Unit Democracy Index scores). These growth interaction effects between FDI and human capital vary according to regime type. Political development in conjunction with FDI appears to suppress the effects of FDI on growth in authoritarian countries while enhancing them in hybrid democracies. For more democratic countries, domestic investment is a more important driver of growth. The effects of FDI on growth in the ten transition economies included in the sample data set are found to be insignificant. Although this result might seem to differ from a priori expectations, it is in line with the findings of most earlier studies that cover the period up to 2004. The paper also provides no strong evidence that a critical threshold of human capital is required to generate beneficial spillover growth effects from inflows of FDI. The paper provides new and more detailed insights into the effects of FDI on growth with particular respect to human capital and political regime covering a large number of transition and developing countries based on an up-to-date data set covering a 25-year period to 2013. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Finance and development: an overview of the issues.
- Author
-
Kirkpatrick, Colin and Green, Christopher
- Subjects
FINANCE ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,POVERTY ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Discusses several issues related to the relationship between finance and development. Link between financial development and economic growth; Role of finance in poverty reduction in developing countries; Stability of the financial system.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Improving Patent Information Quality: Development and the Disclosure Requirements.
- Author
-
Chakroun, Nefissa
- Subjects
PATENTS ,DISCLOSURE ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,ECONOMIC development ,QUALITY ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The paper is based on the premise that disclosure of patent information is essential for development. Thus, the question posed is related to the extent to which substantive disclosure rules can secure the release of quality patent information that can be easily retrieved and utilized for development. To this end, the paper has made the argument that clear and complete disclosure might not be necessarily adequate to secure disclosure of quality patent information so that access and exploitation of this technical knowledge is less than optimal in developing countries. Apart from that, the research has suggested that improving patent information quality in itself might not be sufficient enough to secure access to this technical knowledge. Because availability of information does not always mean that it is accessible, the paper has analysed impediments to the accessibility of patent information showing that in practical terms, accessibility to technical knowledge might be quite poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Rural out-migration and economic development at origin: A review of the evidence.
- Author
-
Mendola, Mariapia
- Subjects
ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,EXTENDED families ,LABOR mobility ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMICS ,FAMILIES & economics - Abstract
A major feature of the current 'mass migration' process is its strong linkages to countries of origin. Migrants belong to spatially extended families and play a crucial role in shaping economic development in home regions. This paper reviews the wide-ranging socio-economic literature on the nexus between labor migration, both domestic and international, and economic development at origin, with a special focus on out-migration from poor rural regions of developing countries. We disentangle direct effects on migrant-sending households from spillover effects on the rest of the economy, highlighting some key knowledge gaps and policy concerns related to the complex and intimate relation between rural labour mobility and economic behaviour of people left behind. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Unlocking Productive Entrepreneurship in Africa's Least Developed Countries.
- Author
-
Brixiova, Zuzana
- Subjects
POVERTY ,DEVELOPING countries ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,ECONOMIC development ,JOB creation ,SMALL business - Abstract
In Africa's least developed countries (LDCs), escape from poverty and convergence to living standards of more advanced economies depends critically on structural transformation and the emergence of productive entrepreneurship that would accelerate growth and job creation. So far, however, subsistence agriculture has been the main source of employment in these countries, while a dynamic private sector in industry or high value-added services has remained elusive. Utilizing the flow approach to labor markets, this paper complements the empirical literature and numerous surveys on small and medium enterprise (SME) constraints and develops a theoretical framework that examines the main obstacles to entrepreneurship in Africa's LDCs. The paper posits that given the persistent frictions in product and labor markets as well as skill shortages that characterize these economies, development of productive entrepreneurship cannot be left to markets alone. The policy analysis suggests that the state has an important role to play. Well-targeted government interventions including training of potential entrepreneurs and workers can help to establish more modern and highly productive SME clusters that Africa's LDCs need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Strengthening Data and Research Tools on Migration and Development.
- Author
-
Black, Richard and Skeldon, Ronald
- Subjects
MIGRANT labor ,TRANSBORDER data flow ,ECONOMIC development ,DATA mining ,FOREIGN workers ,CONTRACT employment ,DATA flow computing ,AUTOMATIC data collection systems ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMICS ,COMPUTER network resources - Abstract
This paper reviews available data sources for the study of migration and development through both retrospective and continuous data collection systems. It is argued that much basic data already exists for the study of international migration but that the addition of a relatively small number of simple, although not necessarily cheap measures can be taken to improve existing data. The priority is to generate flow data between countries for recent time periods and the paper makes suggestions how this can be best achieved. The paper goes on to an assessment of the types and availability of data needed to understand better the relationships between migration and development more broadly. Data at several scales, macro and micro, and for a variety of types of migration will be required in order to achieve this objective, particularly if less visible flows, such as those internal to developing countries, or those involving women, are to be better understood. The paper concludes by moving beyond the traditional state-led data-gathering systems to examine the potential for civil society organizations to help in strengthening data and research on migration and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Aid Selectivity According to Augmented Criteria.
- Author
-
Amprou, Jacky, Guillaumont, Patrick, and Jeanneney, Sylviane Guillaumont
- Subjects
BUSINESS literature ,DEVELOPING countries ,FINANCIAL institutions ,ECONOMIC development ,FINANCIAL aid ,GOVERNMENT aid - Abstract
A dominant trend in the literature maintains that donor assistance should be targeted at poor countries with sound institutions and policies. In this context, donor selectivity refers to what extent aid is allocated according to the principles of this ‘canonical’ model. This paper shows that it is legitimate for donors to simultaneously use other selectivity criteria corresponding either to expected factors of aid effectiveness or to handicaps to development. It is notably argued that vulnerability to exogenous shocks and low level of human capital should be considered as selectivity criteria. Taking these other criteria into account dramatically changes the assessment of donor selectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Institutional Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment.
- Author
-
Bénassy-Quér, Agnès, Coupet, Maylis, and Mayer, Thierry
- Subjects
FOREIGN investments ,INVESTMENTS ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,DATABASES ,BUSINESS literature - Abstract
In this paper, we contribute to the literature on the determinants of foreign direct investment in developing countries and re-evaluate the role of the quality of institutions on FDI independently of the general level of development. We implement cross-section estimations based on a newly available database with unprecedented detail on institutions for a set of 52 countries, as well as panel data estimations based on Fraser Institute's data. Furthermore, we control for the correlation between institutions and GDP per capita and for endogeneity of institutions. Finally, we evaluate whether the similarity of institutions between the host and the origin country raises bilateral FDI. We find that a wide range of institutions, including bureaucracy, corruption, but also information, banking sector and legal institutions, do matter for inward FDI independently of GDP per capita. Interestingly, weak capital concentration and strong employment protection tend to reduce inward FDI. Institutional proximity between the origin and the host country also matters, but we find little impact of institutions in the origin country. These results are encouraging in the sense that efforts towards raising the quality of institutions and making them converge towards those of source countries may help developing countries to receive more FDI, independently of the indirect impact of higher GDP per capita. The orders of magnitude found in the paper are large, meaning that moving from a low level to a high level of institutional quality could have as much impact as suddenly becoming a neighbour of a source country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Reply: In Defence of Global Political Liberalism.
- Author
-
Nussbaum, Martha
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,DEBATE ,LIBERALISM ,EQUALITY ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,DEVELOPING countries ,QUALITY of life - Abstract
The author elaborates the development and refinement of a more human centered approach that she has considered to root out global inequality. Critically analyzing the dominant economic-growth approach taken by many developing countries, the author defends her model of ten central capabilities of a person and analyzes them in terms of political goals. The author also responds individually to several papers including a papers by Des Gasper, Jan Nederveen Pieterse, and others.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Globalization: Welfare Distribution and Costs among Developed and Developing Countries.
- Author
-
Roe, Terry, Somwaru, Agapi, and Xinshen Diao
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,ECONOMIC development ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,WELFARE economics ,ECONOMICS ,PUBLIC spending ,ECONOMIC indicators ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The scope of the paper is limited by focusing on developing countries in the context of the world economy. We mostly consider the effects of globalization on income levels and a country's rate of economic growth. This focus is supported by studies (Ravallion; Bourguignon) that find that the level of income and expenditures across a continuum of household income categories is positively associated with economic growth, although wealthy households may benefit more than those with lower income. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Trade Liberalization in Agriculture in Developed Nations and Incidence of Child Labour in a Developing Economy.
- Author
-
Chaudhuri, Sarbajit and Dwibedi, Jayanta Kumar
- Subjects
TRADE regulation ,FREE trade ,LIBERALISM ,AGRICULTURE ,DEVELOPED countries ,CHILD labor ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This paper is an attempt to analyse the consequence of trade liberalization in agriculture in the developed countries on the incidence of child labour in a developing economy in terms of a three-sector general equilibrium model with informal sectors. Adult labour and child labour are substitutes for each other in the two informal sectors of the economy and are used together apart from capital in producing two exportable commodities. The interesting result that appears from the analysis is that agricultural trade liberalization in the developed countries may be effective in bringing down the incidence of child labour in the system. The paper substantiates the desirability of trade liberalization in agriculture in the developed nations from the perspective of the developing economies for reasons other than welfare improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Globalisation and Economic Growth: A Historical Perspective.
- Author
-
Crafts, Nicholas
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development ,INCOME inequality ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC policy ,INTERNATIONAL trade - Abstract
This paper reviews the historical evidence on the relationship between globalisation and economic growth. Divergence in the growth of income and industrialisation in the twentieth century is documented but it is also noted that international income inequality appears to have decreased since about 1870 and that long-run trends in the Human Development Index are much less pessimistic about the experience of developing countries. It is argued that trade liberalisation has been good for growth on average but that successful capital liberalisation requires high institutional quality and that the developmental state may have an important role to play in the early stages of development. The recent claim by Robert Lucas that the 21st century will see a massive reduction in income inequality across countries in a globalised world economy is sceptically discussed in the context of empirical evidence that bad institutions are often persistent and that geography is still a major factor in explaining international income differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Halving Poverty by Doubling Aid: Is There Reason for Optimism?
- Author
-
Langhammer, Rolf J.
- Subjects
POVERTY ,INCOME ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC policy ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
This paper criticises the World Bank as overly optimistic with respect to its ability to fine-tune development aid and to focus it on countries with ‘good’ policies rather than on countries with ‘poor’ policies in order to raise its effectiveness. It is shown that recipient regions showed very different patterns of aid inflows and economic growth in the past and that aid flows yielded the highest correlation to growth when their magnitudes shrank. It is furthermore argued that categorising countries by quality of domestic policies is not only questionable at a given point of time especially in countries with failing governmental institutions and open borders as in many African countries. It suffers also from incentive problems so that countries receiving more aid can become victims of changes in their domestic policies which are more permissive and etatist to the disadvantage of private agents. The paper instead pleads for a shift to aid policies decoupled from country-specifics and more oriented to fundamental ‘beyond border’ problems of the well-being of the poor. An international endowment fund under supranational law should finance research and implementation of research findings related to common international goods as it was suggested by Sachs concerning aids and tropical disease research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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