843 results on '"ECONOMIC expansion"'
Search Results
2. The Role of Higher Education and Financial Development on Economic Growth: Evidence on North Cyprus.
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İMAMOĞLU, Hatice and ÖZNACAR, Behçet
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ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *HIGHER education , *REAL income , *ECONOMIC sectors - Abstract
This research aims to examine the effects of the development in the higher education and financial sector on economic growth in the case of North Cyprus. Findings of time series data show that there is a long-term equilibrium relationship between real income and its elements such as labor, capital, higher education, and financial growth. Results show that both capital and labor have a statistically significant effect on economic growth. Additionally, development in the financial sector is a significant contributor to economic growth, however, higher education shows evidence of greater contribution to economic growth in North Cyprus. It draws attention that the higher education sector has a greater impact on economic development than the financial sector. In this context, government authorities should support both the financial and higher education sectors in order to accelerate their contribution to economic development. Policymakers needed to concentrate more on the higher education sector in Northern Cyprus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. The SDG conundrum in India: navigating economic development and environmental preservation.
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Boora, Shailendra and Karakunnel, Meljo Thomas
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ECONOMIC development , *SUSTAINABLE development , *STANDARD of living , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *ECONOMIC expansion , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
The paper explores the complex interplay between economic development and environmental sustainability in the context of India's pursuit of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It examines the inherent contradictions and trade-offs involved, particularly in agriculture, industrialisation, and infrastructure sectors. The paper highlights how economic growth, essential for improving living standards, often conflicts with environmental objectives. The paper underscores the importance of integrating economic, environmental, and social objectives to achieve a sustainable and inclusive future for India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Relational Inequality and Economic Outcomes: A Consideration of the Indian Experience.
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Ghosh, Jayati
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WEALTH inequality , *INCOME inequality , *LABOR market , *MARKET segmentation , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
The study of inequality by economists has largely focussed on distributive inequalities of various kinds. The focus on different dimensions of distributive inequality in access and outcomes is welcome. However, it is also important to consider relational inequalities and power imbalances, which economists typically consider to be the domain of sociology, anthropology and related disciplines. Many economic processes cannot be understood without analysing the underlying relational inequalities, which can reveal much about economic processes and associated policies. Some examples from the Indian experience, specifically relating to power imbalances created by gender and caste differentiation, indicate how this can play out. These are not simply 'traditional social forms' that are in opposition to or contradictory with capitalist accumulation. Rather, they are crucial in enabling segmented labour markets and enabling extractivist patterns of accumulation, on which recent Indian economic growth has been dependent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Analysing governance‐led infrastructural development nexus in sub‐Saharan Africa: Does the moderating role of institutional quality matter?
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Appiah, Michael, Onifade, Stephen Taiwo, and Gyamfi, Bright Akwasi
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ECONOMIC expansion , *DEVELOPMENT banks , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Governments engage in infrastructural developments across the globe, and the level of success often colligates with institutional quality levels. However, despite the presence of governance, the lack of well‐developed infrastructure has bedevilled sub‐Saharan African (SSA) countries for decades. Therefore, this study investigates the governance‐led infrastructural development hypothesis for the SSA region from an institutional quality perspective towards addressing the infrastructural deficit challenges of the region. A combination of advanced panel econometric techniques was applied to data collected from the African Development Bank, World Bank World Development Indicator, and International Monetary Fund (IMF) to investigate the governance‐led infrastructural development hypothesis in SSA while controlling for financial development, economic growth, and industrialization in the region. The findings show that the interaction of institutional quality measures and governance indicators significantly and positively induces infrastructure in sub‐Saharan Africa (SSA). Additionally, while economic growth and financial development yield no expected significant influence on infrastructural developments, industrialization plays a crucial role, as its spillover effects are not confined to boosting economic growth alone but also to infrastructural transformations. Thus, the provision of policy frameworks by authorities to strengthen institutions and promote good governance is vital for articulating and facilitating infrastructural development plans for SSA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Good enough for outstanding growth: The experience of Bangladesh in comparative perspective.
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Beyer, Robert C. M. and Wacker, Konstantin M.
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LOW-income countries , *INSTITUTIONAL environment , *PANEL analysis , *ECONOMIC expansion , *PEERS - Abstract
Motivation: Bangladesh's economic growth rate over the past three decades has been one of the highest in the world. This success is difficult to reconcile with a single macroeconomic explanation of development. Purpose: Previous studies have investigated individual aspects that can explain Bangladesh's successful development. But a consistent account of how individual factors contributed to growth is currently missing. Can factors that correlate with growth in other countries explain the outstanding growth performance of Bangladesh? Or is the country's experience unique? Methods and approach: We construct a panel data set for 149 countries since 1970 and combine growth regression techniques with a peer group comparison. Different specifications, subsamples, and estimation techniques are considered. Finding s : Factors correlating with growth in other countries can well explain the growth experience of Bangladesh. But two features are specific to the country. First, a combination of "good enough" policies led to considerable growth impulses between 1990 and 2005: the country's improvements in typical correlates of growth during this period were among the global top 5% for any 15‐year period investigated. Second, despite the absence of major reforms after 2005, Bangladesh defied the mean reversion in growth rates experienced by most fast‐growing economies and peer countries. Policy implications: Our results support the idea that a combination of "good enough" policies can jump‐start high growth in low‐income countries. Our findings further demonstrate that a stable macroeconomic and institutional environment helps when it comes to reaping the benefits of structural improvements in the long run. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. The environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis: an ML approach to assessing economic growth and environmental sustainability using artificial neural network.
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Sun, Yunqiu, Sun, Zhiyu, and Jiang, Zhiman
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ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *KUZNETS curve , *ECONOMIC expansion , *SUSTAINABLE development , *SUSTAINABILITY , *ECONOMIC indicators , *ENVIRONMENTAL indicators , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation - Abstract
In recent years, environmental concerns have emerged as significant obstacles to economic advancement, leading to a critical examination of the complex relationship between environmental sustainability and economic expansion. With the economy expanding swiftly and environmental hazards intensifying, immediate action must be taken to address these problems. This necessitates innovative policies and practices that foster sustainable economic growth while minimizing environmental impact. To solve these issues, this study proposed an extensive analytical framework employing machine learning techniques, particularly artificial neural networks (ANNs), to investigate the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis. According to the EKC hypothesis, environmental degradation worsens before economic growth occurs. This study examines GDP per capita and key environmental indicators to measure economic development, using data from Anhui Province, China, from 2012 to 2019. The analysis provides empirical support for the theory and establishes a modeling framework that seamlessly integrates ML methodologies with EKC analysis, systematically examining and assessing the EKC's reliability for Anhui Province. The intricate interplay between Anhui Province's environment and economy, utilizing industrial waste gas, wastewater, and solid waste as critical indicators, evaluates environmental quality. At the same time, per capita GDP is the economic growth parameter. The findings indicate that the EKC does not adhere to an unchanging law but instead displays variations in distribution characteristics. The experimental results of the proposed ANN model demonstrate an impressive accuracy rate of 87%, outperforming five alternative models, including RF, KNN, DT, and LR. This superior model performance underscores the effectiveness of the ANN-based approach in capturing the intricate dynamics linking economic development and environmental pollution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Evaluation of synergistic effect between "dual carbon" and high-quality economic development based on the FOPA-Cloud model.
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Lin, Xiangyi, Luo, Hongyun, and Lian, Yinghuan
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ECONOMIC development , *CARBON , *WEIGHING instruments , *ECONOMIC expansion , *CARBON offsetting - Abstract
This research mainly evaluates the synergistic effect of "dual carbon" and high-quality economic development from four aspects: carbon reduction, pollution reduction, green expansion, and economic growth. Firstly, an indicator system of synergistic effect evaluation is constructed, and a FOPA-Cloud evaluation model is proposed based on the FOPA (Fuzzy Ordinal Priority Approach) and Cloud model. Based on the evaluation of experts' language variables, it is calculated that a province's "dual carbon" and high-quality economic development generally belong to a high-level synergistic effect. However, further improvement is still needed in reducing carbon, pollution reduction, and green expansion. The tedious work of pairwise comparison can be overcome in the FOPA-Cloud model. Optimizing and solving to determine the weight of each indicator can not only determine the overall level but also analyze specific reasons, which can provide a basis for improving the synergistic effect of "dual carbon" and high-quality economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The link between economic growth and emigration from developing countries: Does migrants' skill composition matter?
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Lanati, Mauro and Thiele, Rainer
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EMIGRATION & immigration , *ECONOMIC expansion , *IMMIGRANTS , *ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Tackling the root causes of migration from developing countries through development cooperation has been suggested as an essential part of the policy mix in OECD migrant destinations. This is even though the evidence on whether economic development leads to more or less people emigrating is so far inconclusive. We investigate the relationship between income per capita and emigration to OECD countries separately for three different skill groups—low‐skilled, medium‐skilled and high‐skilled emigrants—being the first to employ panel regression approaches that account for cross‐country heterogeneity and cover a policy‐relevant time frame of about 5 years. Our findings reveal a universal negative association between income per capita and emigration for all three skill groups and for different income thresholds. This implies that policy makers should not be too concerned about potential trade‐offs between (successful) development cooperation and immigration management, at least in the short to medium run that our analysis covers. At the same time, the scope for using development cooperation as a migration policy instrument can be considered to be limited given the modest size of the estimated income effect: Taking our point estimates at face value, a 10% rise in GDP per capita would on average lead to about 3600 fewer immigrants per destination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Financial development, export and economic growth: Panel data evidence from Commonwealth of Independent States.
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Öncel, Abidin, Saidmurodov, Shukhrat, and Kutlar, Aziz
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ECONOMIC expansion , *PANEL analysis , *ECONOMIC indicators , *ECONOMIC development , *BANKING industry , *EXPORTS - Abstract
This study focuses on the relation of four different financial development indicators and export performance, sampled from nine member states of the Commonwealth of Independent States, with economic growth for the period of 1995–2020. Its long-run relationship with PVAR analysis has been presented through VECM. The FMOLS and DOLS methods are used for the long-term coefficient estimates. According to the findings, there is a cointegration relationship between economic growth and export, and broad money, domestic credit to the private sector by banks, and monetary sector credit to private sector variables. The findings indicate that both financial development and export have a positive impact on economic growth. On the other hand, the findings have not presented sufficient evidence about the influence of the gross capital formation variable on economic growth while the monetary sector credit to private sector variable has been found to negatively affect economic growth. When the results of FMOLS and DOLS models are assessed together, it is concluded that export and financial development affects economic growth positively in the long term, but the first one's effect is less. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Spatial effect of carbon neutrality target on high-quality economic development—Channel analysis based on total factor productivity.
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Cui, Yiniu, Zhong, Cheng, Cao, Jianhong, Guo, Mengyao, and Zhang, Meng
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INDUSTRIAL productivity , *ECONOMIC development , *CARBON offsetting , *MEDIATION (Statistics) , *ECONOMIC expansion , *PANEL analysis - Abstract
This study utilizes panel data from 30 provinces in mainland China from 2011 to 2020 to investigate the impact of carbon-neutral development on economic high-quality development by constructing an economic high-quality development index and a carbon-neutral development index. Firstly, the study examines the effects of carbon-neutral development on economic high-quality development using baseline regression and spatial Durbin regression. The results indicate that carbon-neutral development has a positive direct effect on economic high-quality growth, but there are negative spatial spillover effects. Secondly, this study employs total factor productivity (TFP) as an intermediate variable in the mediation model regression. The findings demonstrate that carbon-neutral development significantly improves TFP, and the significant improvement in TFP promotes high-quality economic growth. Lastly, the study conducts regional heterogeneity analysis and finds a significant promoting effect of carbon-neutral development on economic high-quality development in the eastern and central regions of China, while it is not significant in the western region. Therefore, it is recommended that China, in the process of achieving carbon-neutral growth, consider the geographical connections between different regions to prevent negative spillover effects. Additionally, regional heterogeneity should be taken into account when formulating relevant policies to promote economic high-quality development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. AĞRI İLİNDEKİ KADIN VE GENÇ GİRİŞİMCİLERİN KURDUKLARI İŞLETMELERLE İLGİLİ NİTEL BİR ARAŞTIRMA.
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GÜMÜŞ, Ahmet
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ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *ENTREPRENEURSHIP - Abstract
In the present study, the objective was to conduct a qualitative study on the businesses established by women and young entrepreneurs in the city of Ağrı. In this context, openended questions were asked to investigate the problems, advantages, disadvantages, prominent and distinctive characteristics, and recommendations of the entrepreneurs within the aim of the study, and the qualitative responses of the participants were analyzed. When the answers given by the participants in the study were analyzed, it was found that it is important to increase the amount and variety of incentives and support given by government institutions to increase the number of women and young entrepreneurs in Ağrı, they have goals and plans to be the best in the future and to provide the best services, and the candidates who want to become entrepreneurs are encouraged to perform their entrepreneurial activities, and the authorities advise the entrepreneurs to adopt risk-taking as a way of thinking. It can be argued that the findings of the study can be beneficial in terms of its results, in terms of guiding both the literature and the young and female entrepreneur candidates who want to engage in entrepreneurial activities in the city of Ağrı. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. LOS LÍMITES DEL DESARROLLO BRASILEÑO ENTRE 2003 Y 2016.
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Fontana, Brenda and Gontijo, Caio
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ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *DEINDUSTRIALIZATION , *ECONOMIC models , *FINANCIALIZATION , *NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
This article examines Brazil's economic experience between 2003 and 2016, its limits in promoting development and structural change while analyzing the policies adopted and their consequences. The economic growth model based on the conciliation of competing interests and the maintenance of liberal orthodoxy proved unsustainable in the medium term. Maintaining the overvalued exchange rate and high-interest rate hindered industry and national development. The timid attempt at developmentalism could not contain the process of deindustrialization and financialization. The neoliberal agenda was maintained, which prevented structural changes and deepened financialization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Islamic finance and economic growth: Global evidence.
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Hanif, Muhammad, Chaker, Mohammed, and Sabah, Ariba
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ISLAMIC finance , *ECONOMIC expansion , *FINANCIAL services industry , *ECONOMIC development , *BANK assets - Abstract
We document the contribution of Islamic finance development to economic growth by studying a global sample of countries engaged in providing Islamic financial services. Fifteen countries are included in the sample based on significant Islamic banking share in total domestic banking assets. Results are documented through the application of the Panel regression (EGLS) method for the period 2001–2020. Findings suggest a positive contribution of the Islamic Financial Services Industry (IFSI) to economic growth in sample countries in multiple regression settings. Additionally, a range of control variables, including domestic credit to the private sector, inflation, and trade openness, contribute significantly to economic growth. We recommend the creation of a conducive environment for the promotion of IFSI on account of the built‐in stability feature and positive contribution to economic growth. We also recommend overall development in the financial sector of selected economies, including credit availability to the private sector and trade openness. Our study helps in understanding the dynamics of economic growth in economies with a dual banking system (conventional & Islamic). This article contributes to the literature by studying a larger sample of countries engaged in the practice of Islamic finance and considering the significance of the market share of assets under IFSI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Public Health Development and Economic Growth: Evidence From Chinese Cities.
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Zhang, Hui
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ECONOMIC development , *FIXED effects model , *CITIES & towns , *ECONOMIC expansion , *URBAN community development , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
High-quality construction of public health system is the key to maintain social economic activities be ordered and stable. The aim of this study is to understand whether public health development can promote economic growth and how. We construct a public health development index combining the variables of local pollution control and health care by EVM method. Based on the panel data of Chinese 283 cities from 2004 to 2017, fixed effect model and two-stage least squares model are used to test the impact of public health development on economic growth. Then, we discuss the heterogeneous impact of public health development on economic growth though the threshold regression model, under different government intervention, employment population scale and urbanization ratio. What's more, we discuss the possible transmission effect of three human capital mechanisms, namely mortality, consumption rate and employment population size between public health development and economic growth. The conclusions are: (1) For every 0.1 unit increase in public health development, the growth rate of real GDP can be increased by 5 percentage points, which can drive the nominal GDP growth by about 0.17 percentage points. (2) Public health development can promote economic growth regardless of the scale of urban employment population. Only when the urbanization ratio exceeds 70.87 and the government intervention level is lower than 0.058, the development of public health is conducive to the improvement of urban economic development. (3) Public health development helps to promote economic growth, mainly through two paths, reducing mortality and increasing human capital accumulation. And, reducing mortality is more conducive to urban economic growth than increasing human capital accumulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Does Social Globalization Affect the Relationship Between International Tourism and Economic Growth?
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Haini, Hazwan, Wei Loon, Pang, Yong, Soo Keong, and Husseini, Sufrizul
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INTERNATIONAL tourism , *ECONOMIC expansion , *GLOBALIZATION , *ECONOMIC globalization , *INTERNATIONAL airports , *TOURISM websites - Abstract
This study examines the moderating effect of social globalization on the relationship between international tourism and economic growth using a dataset of 143 economies from 1995 to 2017. Social globalization is broadly defined as the sharing of cultures and beliefs which facilitates the flow of ideas and knowledge. Our results show that social globalization affects economic growth directly and indirectly through enhancing international tourism. However, we find that the direct effect of international tourism on growth is not statistically significant for developing economies. On the other hand, tourism-dependent developing economies can benefit from growth as social globalization increases. This implies that policymakers can promote growth by developing institutions and infrastructure to enhance social globalization, such as implementing visa-free travel and the construction of international airports, to enhance the growth-gains from international tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. High speed running development as an impetus of social and economic development.
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Konysheva, E., Ponomareva, M., Morozova, E., and Kondrachuk, O.
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RUNNING speed , *ECONOMIC development , *QUALITY of life , *IMPORT substitution , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
Nowadays, the main goal is to accelerate economic growth rates and improve the life quality of Russian population by creating a network of express and high-speed rail services, providing the optimal balance of speed, comfort and fare for passengers. To achieve this goal, the following objectives can be distinguished: Improving of the social and economic efficiency of the space organization of the Russian Federation. Creation of new economic growth drivers of Russia through the formation of demand for high-tech products and services, including import substitution. Improving the competitiveness of rail passenger transportation in relation to other modes of transport. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Investigating Interaction Dynamics among Nonoil Economic Growth and Its Most Important Determinants: Evidence from Saudi Arabia.
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Al-Abdi, Badr Saleh, Badr, Abdallah M. M., Ali, Faisal A. M., Jabbar, Tawfik M. A., and Al–Salwi, Fahmy
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ECONOMIC expansion , *COINTEGRATION , *GRANGER causality test , *PETROLEUM as fuel , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC impact , *PETROLEUM - Abstract
Over the past decades, Saudi Arabia's economic development has strongly depended on oil revenues fueled by the rise of oil prices and the strong global market demands for crude oils. However, the country can no longer depend on oil revenues in the face of the dynamic global market, and hence, the Saudi government's Vision 2030 seeks to reduce this dependence and diversify the economy's sources of income. Motivated by this, this study aims to investigate the impact of growth factors: financial innovation (FI), nonoil trade openness (TO), nonoil gross capital formation (GCF), and human capital (CH) development on the nonoil economic growth in Saudi Arabia. The goal of this investigation is to examine the dynamic symmetrical and nonsymmetrical impact of these growth factors on nonoil economic growth and policymaking in Saudi Arabia. To achieve this, this study utilizes the distributed lag symmetric and asymmetric (ARDL and NARD) approaches to assess the short- and long-term symmetric relationships among these growth variables with nonoil economic growth as well as the stationarity, cointegration, and directionality among variables with the theory of "ceteris paribus" in the error correction model (ECM), and Granger causality framework to analyze time-series data from 1980 to 2020. The findings of this study revealed that the FI, TO, GCF, and CH have an impact on the nonoil economic growth in the short and long terms. Additionally, in the long term, the NARDL technique showed that the positive adjustments of HC, FI, TO, and GCF boost the development, which have very significant effects on the nonoil GDP. They also indicate that negative movements have more influence than positive movements in FI. Meanwhile, mixed directional causation results were observed in the short-run analyses. Overall, the findings of this study provide significant insights, empirical recommendations, and implications for policymakers striving to achieve sustainable nonoil trade economic growth in Saudi Arabia and the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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19. Hacia la transformación de la estrategia de crecimiento y desarrollo de América Latina y el Caribe: el papel de las políticas de desarrollo productivo.
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Salazar-Xirinachs, José Manuel and Llinás, Marco
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ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *REGIONAL development , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *EMPLOYMENT - Published
- 2023
20. INCLUSIVENESS AND COMPETITIVENESS PERFORMANCE OF DIGITAL FINANCIAL INCLUSION: FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF REGIONAL INEQUITY.
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Yanan Pang and Qian Wang
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REGIONAL disparities , *DIGITAL divide , *FINANCIAL performance , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
With China's rapid economic development, disparities within provinces have increased, leading to significant regional inequality. The goal of financial inclusion is to provide financial services to lag-behind regions and disadvantaged groups to promote economic growth and enhance competitiveness. Further investigation is needed to determine whether digital financial inclusion has contributed to greater inclusion or aggravated regional inequality due to the digital divide. The main aim of this study is to examine the inclusive effects and competitiveness gains of digital financial inclusion from the perspective of regional inequality. By analyzing 23 Chinese provinces from 2011 to 2019 through the panel fixed effects model, the results support the existence of a digital divide, which creates regional inequality. Further analysis of the moderating effects reveals that the elimination of the digital divide by digital competitiveness reduces the effect of regional inequality's impact on digital financial inclusion. The advantages of digital financial inclusion to improve competitiveness are already beginning to emerge. This paper reveals that digital financial inclusion has a non-linear threshold effect. At a time of rapid growth in digital financial inclusion, it is crucial to be aware of the inequalities brought on by the digital divide and, more importantly, to capture the beneficial effects of digital competitiveness to enhance regional competitiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. The Impact of Stock, Market. On Economic. Growth: Evidence from Developed European.Countries.
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Gollopeni, Krenare Shahini, Bilalli, Argjira, Haxhimustafa, Shenaj, and Gara, Atdhetar
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STOCKS (Finance) , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC impact , *ECONOMIC expansion , *CONSUMER price indexes - Abstract
The purpose of the study is to investigate the impact of stock market development on economic growth for nine developed European countries. In many countries, the stock market (SM), is considered. one of the crucial elements for promoting sustainable economic growth and development. By analysing data from nine developed European countries over 21 years, from 2000 to 2020, including Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Turkey, and Poland, this study seeks to determine the effect of the stock. market. on economic growth. The years 2021 and 2022 are not included due to the lack of data, mainly as a result of the pandemic period. The dataset, extracted from the World Bank database, is used to generate results by applying different econometric models such as OLS, OLS Robust, Fixed, and the Random Effect, which turned out to be more suitable in this study. According to research, macroeconomic factors such as stock. market development (SMD), and inflation (INF), have a significant positive impact while, domestic credit to the private sector (DC), has a negative significant impact on economic growth, in respective periods and countries. Therefore, new research on this topic could help better understand the stock market's impact on economic growth, and new conclusions might greatly benefit developed European countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Market integration and economic growth.
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Lyu, Shiqi, Chen, Zexian, Pan, Simei, and Liu, Lianhua
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ECONOMIC expansion , *TRADE regulation , *REGIONAL development , *CITIES & towns , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This study empirically examines the interplay between market integration and economic growth across nine cities within the Pearl River Delta urban agglomeration. The findings indicate that the city cluster's market integration negatively impacts regional economic development and has a negligible effect on the surrounding areas. In response, the research recommends the elimination of market trade barriers and a reduction in local protectionism within the city cluster. Additionally, infrastructure enhancement is essential to leverage the distinct comparative advantages of each city within the Pearl River Delta urban agglomeration. An efficient collaboration mechanism is crucial to amplify the collective economic potency of the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. On the empirics of microfinance institutions and local economic development in Africa.
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Chekenya, Nixon S.
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ECONOMIC development , *MICROFINANCE , *ECONOMIC activity , *ECONOMIC statistics , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
The link between finance and growth is a well-researched area, yet this relationship at the local level has received little empirical scrutiny. We trace the operations of Microfinance Institutions (MFIs) in Africa. We examine the role played by MFIs on local economic development using a model capturing both local geography and MFIs dynamics for the periods 1992–2015. Our sample is representative of 2,170 MFIs operating in 144 cities, 154 towns, and 14 villages in Africa. Using night time data to capture economic growth, our key hypothesis is that MFIs drive local economic progress. Conditioning on the geographical location of MFIs, we find that the presence and density of MFIs increase as the growth in light density and the estimate retains its statistical significance. The results suggest that MFIs operations may foster local economic activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. CHINA’S HIGH-QUALITY INNOVATION DEVELOPMENT FROM AN INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE: REGIONAL DIFFERENCES AND CONVERGENCE.
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Ken CHENG, Hongwen CHEN, Fan ZHANG, and Meiyang ZHANG
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REGIONAL differences , *TECHNOLOGY convergence , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *PATENT databases , *INDUSTRIAL productivity , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
High-quality innovation is an inevitable requirement for high-quality economic development, and an accurate grasp of the regional distribution characteristics of the level of highquality innovation development (HQID) can better understand and simulate high-quality innovation. This paper constructs a dataset of high-value inventions based on the Chinese patent database using textual analysis methods and the criteria for High-Quality Inventions proposed by the State Intellectual Property Office, and explores inter-provincial variability and convergence by using the Theil index, α convergence, and β convergence. This paper finds that High-Quality Inventions are significantly and positively correlated with various indicators measuring the quality and value of patents. In general, the overall level of HQID is on an upward trend with clear differences among provinces, which shows a regional unbalanced but overall rapid development. From the regional differences of HQID, the regional differences of HQID have been narrowed, mainly within the region. In terms of the convergence of HQID, α convergence, absolute β convergence, conditional β convergence, and club convergence exist nationally and within each region, which indicates that the gap between the national and regional levels of HQID has been narrowing over time. HQID has a positive promotion effect on the relationship between HQID and economic growth, economic growth rate, and total factor productivity. High-quality innovation can improve the quality of input factors, cultivate new dynamic energy for economic development, and then promote high-quality economic development. In the context of the shift of IP work from pursuing quantity to improving quality, the scientific understanding of high-quality innovation, the development status, and the differences of regional innovation high-quality development is of great significance for improving innovation quality and efficiency, and effectively supporting high-quality economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. The development gap in economic rationality of future elites.
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Cappelen, Alexander W., Kariv, Shachar, Sørensen, Erik Ø., and Tungodden, Bertil
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ECONOMIC development , *COGNITIVE Abilities Test , *STOCHASTIC dominance , *CHOICE (Psychology) , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
We test the touchstones of economic rationality—utility maximization, stochastic dominance, and expected-utility maximization—of elite students in the U.S. and in Africa. The choices of most students in both samples are generally rationalizable, but the U.S. students' scores are substantially higher. Nevertheless, the development gap in economic rationality in incentivized risk choices between these future elites is much smaller than the difference in performance on a non-incentivized canonical cognitive ability test, often used as a proxy for economic decision-making ability in studies of economic development and growth. We argue for the importance of including consistency with economic rationality in studies of decision-making ability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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26. Economic Inequality and the Permissibility of Leveling Down.
- Author
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Peña-Rangel, David
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *VOTERS , *DEVELOPMENT economics , *ECONOMIC activity , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
In this paper I argue that the political and economic domains are analogous for distributive purposes. The upshot of this conclusion is that because we normally think that an unequal distribution of votes is objectionable even if these inequalities are strictly necessary to improve the lives of less informed voters, so we should conclude that an unequal distribution of resources might be similarly objectionable even if strictly necessary to make the worse off better off. Leveling down economic resources is therefore sometimes morally permissible. I consider and reject three types of objections to this view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Growth and Development under Alternative Policy Regimes in India: A Political Economy Perspective.
- Author
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Ghosh, Madhusudan
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC policy , *GROSS domestic product , *INCOME inequality , *ECONOMIC expansion , *URBAN poor - Abstract
This paper reviews the economic policies adopted by the Indian government under different policy regimes, provides a political economy perspective of economic growth in the country during 1950–2020 and examines the inclusiveness of the rapid economic growth in recent decades. The growth performance of the economy improved as the economy moved from inward-looking policy regime to the regimes of pro-business and pro-market policies. India's political economy was supportive of the changes in policy regime. After growing at a sluggish rate during the first three decades after 1950–1951, the gross domestic product (GDP) growth accelerated significantly after the pro-business reforms in the 1980s, and there was further acceleration after the pro-market reforms since 1991–1992. It has, however, slowed down in recent years. Nevertheless, it has not been inclusive, as the benefits of growth have not reached all sections of the population and all regions of the country equally. On the contrary, disparities in income across regions and inequalities in income, wealth and consumption among individuals have exacerbated, and the problems of unemployment and poverty have been persisting in the economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. THE EFFECT OF R&D ON ECONOMIC GROWTH: EVIDENCE FROM CROSS-COUNTRY PANEL DATA.
- Author
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Pradhan, Rudra P.
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC expansion , *PANEL analysis , *MOMENTS method (Statistics) , *ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Research and Development (R&D) in particular and innovation in general are the best drivers of long-run sustainable economic growth and spending in R&D has been recognized as one of the means to the economic accomplishment of both developed and developing countries. However, the sustainability of the association between R&D & economic growth exclusively depends upon the performance of other macroeconomic determinants. Hence, we examine the effect of R&D on economic growth in the existence of five important macroeconomic determinants. The study focusses on 151 selected countries, including both developed and developing, over the period 1996-2020 and focused on the macro-level analysis. Our research is based on the deployment of system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) technique. The GMM technique encompasses longitudinal data; and is gathered by pooling time-series across a pool of cross-sectional units, specifically countrywise. The biggest advantage of using the GMM technique is that it allows for addressing the endogeneity problem using lagged explanatory variables as instrumental variables. We have three samples in our analysis, namely pool of developed countries, pool of developing countries, and the pool of both developed and developing countries. Our study deploys four proxies of R&D to work the nexus between R&D and economic growth in presence of five important macroeconomic determinants. In each of these three samples, we run four GMM models, depending upon the deployment of four R&D activities that we used in this study. We observe an evidence that R&D plays a significant role in economic growth when the selected macroeconomic determinants are used as control variables. Our findings are mostly robust to R&D specifications, country specifications, model specifications, and estimation strategies. Most importantly, the effect of lagged economic growth is highly positive, signifying that economies with higher economic growth in the previous years tend to grow faster in presence of R&D intensity. The behaviour of other macroeconomic variables is having diverse nature. Some of these variables behave positively, while others behave negatively. This study suggests that policymakers should focus on improving R&D activities and strengthening the chosen macroeconomic determinants to facilitate economic development. Hence, it contributes to the ongoing policy debate, that is with reference to R&D effect on economic growth, on the finest strategies for attaining sustainable economic growth in all these selected countries. Hence, we can use these findings to develop a targeted policy that promotes R&D intensity in the phases of economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. Do FDI and Trade Openness Matter for Economic Growth in CIS Countries? Evidence from Panel ARDL.
- Author
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Sobirov, Yuldoshboy, Jeong, Ji Young, Karimov, Mamurbek Utkir ugli, and Bekjanov, Dilmurad
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC expansion , *FOREIGN investments , *ECONOMIC impact , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
For the purpose of this paper, we examine the association between foreign direct investment, openness to trade, infrastructure, innovation, and economic development in 10 members of the Commonwealth Independent States between 2000 and 2020 using a panel Autoregressive Distributed Lag model. According to the results, none of the elements that are researched for this paper has a statistically significant influence on economic growth over the short term. On the other hand, in the long run, each of the variables, including foreign direct investment, infrastructure, innovation, and trade openness, has a statistically favorable and substantial impact on economic growth; furthermore, the findings are in line with the findings of the baseline static panel data models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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30. THE IMPACT OF PUBLIC BANKS ON MUNICIPALITIES: A STUDY OF THE BANK OF PARÁ.
- Author
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de Moura Vogt, Camila and Alcantara Alencar, Douglas
- Subjects
- *
INCOME , *BANKING industry , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *DEVELOPMENT banks , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *ECONOMETRICS - Abstract
This study examines the influence of the State bank of the State of Pará, a development bank, on the socioeconomic growth of municipalities in the State of Pará, Brazil. Unlike commercial banks that often reduce their branch network, Banpará has expanded its presence in almost all municipalities. Using spatial econometrics and impact assessment methodologies, the study measures the impact of Banpará branches on these municipalities. The results demonstrate a positive effect contributing to higher Gross Value Added (GVA) in the services sector and public administration of Pará. Additionally, municipalities that established a Banpará branch between 2010 and 2019 exhibited positive results in salaries and production. These findings highlight the critical role of development banks in prioritizing socioeconomic development and fostering inclusive growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
31. Local Economic Development in South African Municipalities: Prospects and Challenges.
- Author
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Juta, Lusanda B.
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *CITIES & towns , *ECONOMIC expansion , *SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Extant literature has emphasised the significance of economic development at provincial and national levels in South Africa. However, there is less emphasis placed on economic development at the local level. Hence, this paper aims to fill the gap by discussing the Local Economic Development (LED) as a concept vis-à-vis its prospects and challenges. It relies heavily on secondary sources of data. This paper explicates the knowledge and understanding of integrated as well as coherent purpose of LED in the South African municipalities. On the one hand, it analyses the institutional need and relevance of LED with a view to understanding how LED has promoted and stimulated economic growth and development at the local level in South Africa. On the other hand, it identifies the contribution of LED to municipal system, and reflects on the challenges facing LED in SA. This paper concludes by providing consistent recommendations on measures addressing LED challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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32. FINANCIAL SYSTEM AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A STUDY FOR EMERGING COUNTRIES THROUGH A SYSTEM OF SIMULTANEOUS EQUATIONS.
- Author
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Warrener, Thomas Cristofaro, Silva, Fernanda Faria, and di Guimarães, Luanna
- Subjects
- *
SIMULTANEOUS equations , *ECONOMIC systems , *ECONOMIC development , *FOREIGN investments , *ECONOMIC expansion ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Objective: The objective of this paper was to analyze the bidirectional relationship between financial development and economic growth for a dataset of Latin American and Asian developing countries between 2001 and 2019. Method: This research employed an empirical approach to analyze the statistical relationship between financial development and economic growth, by presenting an estimation of a system of simultaneous equations for a panel of Asian and Latin American countries using 3SLS. Main Results: The results presented in this research provided evidence that financial development does not appear to have a significant impact on economic growth, although growth appears to have a significant and positive influence on financial development. Moreover, the results also suggested that regulatory quality and domestic credit directed to the private sector have a positive effect on economic growth, while urbanization and education showed a negative influence on growth. The estimated model also indicated that urbanization has a positive influence on financial development while foreign direct investment presented a negative effect on the development of the financial sector. Relevance / Originality: Most of the research agenda on the topic of finance and growth has focused on identifying correlation or causality between these variables, with little attention given to the simultaneous relationship between them. This is still a clear gap in economic literature. Following this premise, the objective of this paper was to analyze the bidirectional relationship between financial development and growth by estimating a system of simultaneous equations using the Zellner and Theil’s (1962) 3SLS methodology. In this sense, the main contribution will be given empirically, based on data and analysis from emerging countries in Latin America and Asia. The fact that financial development has an influence on growth and growth plays a role on the development of the financial sector indicates a simultaneous relationship between these variables. Another relevant contribution is to update the debate on financial systems and economic development for emerging countries, highlighting institutional aspects and financial cycles. Theoretical / Methodological Contributions: The main contribution of this study is in the empirical strategy, whose results dialogue with part of the literature on the financial system and development presented along the text. That is, this research explored the statistical relationship between economic development and financial development for a sample composed by twenty-two Asian and Latin American emerging countries, using a simultaneous equations model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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33. Bottom-Up Convergence? Explaining Uneven Income Growth in the New South.
- Author
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James, Ryan D., Campbell Jr., Harrison S., and Graves, William
- Subjects
- *
GROWTH , *CIVIL rights movements , *CAPITAL movements , *INFORMATION economy , *LOCATION marketing , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
The southeastern United States has experienced rapid economic and population growth relative to the stagnation and decline of established manufacturing regions. The Rust Belt-Sun Belt literature has relied on a range of factors to explain southern growth (e.g. low wages, regional amenities, technological advances, market proximity, and the Civil Rights Movement). More recent work has cast growth in terms of bottom-up convergence and providing a conceptual framework consistent with the region's experience as the recipient of northern capital seeking a low-cost region. Within the region, uneven development remains. While the neoclassical framework can explain regional capital inflows, questions remain regarding how local and spatial contexts influence the trajectories of individual southern economies. To address these issues, this paper utilizes a conditional convergence model to explain southeastern county-level growth from 1990 to 2018 to understand how the balance of neoclassical processes and localized factors have affected the region's growth. Results highlight a transition away from low-cost manufacturing toward an increased importance of new, knowledge economy sectors. While new economy sectors are identified as significant drivers, results also suggest future challenges for sustained growth due to a suburbanized growth pattern, weak spillover effects, and a lack of urbanization economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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34. The role of aviation networks for urban development.
- Author
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Cristea, Anca D.
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *INDUSTRIAL location , *AIR travel , *METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
City officials are continuously working to attract airlines willing to fly to new destinations. The inherent expectation is that a more extensive aviation network stimulates economic growth. This paper investigates empirically the causal implication of this hypothesis. Using data on nonstop flights by origin and destination over the period 1984–2013, we propose a new measure for a metropolitan area's connectivity to the national aviation network. We then use this measure to investigate its contribution to local economic development, as captured by the growth in population, in total employment, in per‐capita income, and new firm entry. To ensure causality, we use instrumental variable methods that exploit geography and destination airports growth as a way to capture the exogenous variation in the likelihood to add new travel routes. Our results suggest that a metropolitan area's air connectivity, resulting from an expansive local aviation network, has a positive effect on population, on employment and on the number of businesses established in that location. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Exploring the Coupling and Forecasting of Industry Chain, Innovation Chain and Service Chain under the Background of Low Carbon Economy.
- Author
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Shouwen Wang and Xueqing Zhao
- Subjects
- *
REGIONAL development , *INNER cities , *ECONOMIC expansion , *CARBON , *ECONOMIC development , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *CARBON nanofibers - Abstract
Low carbon economy emphasizes innovative, green, and high-quality economic growth mode. The deep integration and coordinated development of the industry chain, innovation chain and service chain are an effective measure and inevitable requirement to transform the pattern of economic growth and boost the low-carbon economy. Taking the data of Wuhan, Nanchang and Changsha, the central cities of the middle reaches of the Yangtze River city cluster, from 2013 to 2020 as samples, this paper discusses the mechanism of the three-chain coordinated development to promote high-quality economic development, uses the coupling coordination model to measure the three-chain coordination degree, and the grey relational degree model to predict the future development of the three chains in this region. The research results show that: since the establishment of the case city cluster, the three chains of the central cities have experienced a change from disharmony to gradual coordinated development, and the trend is good. However, the coordination degree is still low at present, which is not conducive to the sustainable development of regional economy. According to the research results, policy suggestions are put forward to promote intra-city three-chain coordination and inter-city three-chain integration coordination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. 数字化对经济增长与生态环境协调发展的驱动机制.
- Author
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江永红, 刘梦媛, and 杨 春
- Subjects
- *
DIGITAL technology , *FIXED effects model , *REGIONAL development , *DIGITIZATION , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *PANEL analysis - Abstract
The advent of the digital age has provided new momentum and opportunities for the coordinated development of economic growth and the ecological environment. Based on the panel data from Chinese provinces from 2011 to 2020 and the construction of a comprehensive index system for the coordinated development of economic growth and ecological environment, this study examined multiple dimensions using the fixed effects model, the spatial Durbin model, and the threshold regression model to empirically investigate the impact of digitization on their coordinated development and its underlying mechanisms. The research findings indicated that: ① During the observation period, the coupling coordination degree between economic growth and the ecological environment showed a steady upward trend over time, with a spatial distribution pattern that was high in the eastern region and low in the central and western regions. ② Digitization effectively promoted the coordinated development of economic growth and the ecological environment, and this conclusion still held after a series of robustness tests. In terms of the underlying mechanisms, industrial transformation and upgrading, improvement of innovation levels, and enhancement of energy efficiency played significant mediating roles in the process of digitization empowerment. ③ Regional analysis revealed heterogeneity in the impact of digitization on the coordinated development of economic growth and the ecological environment. Compared to the western region, digitization had a more significant empowering effect in the eastern and central regions, while its impact was not significant in the northeast region. ④ From a spatial perspective, digitization exhibited a significant spatial spillover effect on the coordinated development of economic growth and the ecological environment, meaning that digitization contributed to improving economic growth and ecological environment coordination in neighboring regions. ⑤ Threshold analysis demonstrated that the impact of digitization on the coordinated development of the economy and the environment exhibited a nonlinear relationship under the constraints of human capital levels and digital infrastructure. Once a fixed threshold was reached, this impact would undergo a significant change, exhibiting distinct threshold characteristics. Based on these findings, this article puts forward policy recommendations in areas such as strengthening digital infrastructure, accelerating the application of digital technology in the ecological field, deepening industrial restructuring, promoting the level of research and development, enhancing energy efficiency, and formulating differentiated development strategies in accordance with regional development characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Impact of financial development on domestic investment: Evidence from West African countries.
- Author
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Keho, Yaya
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *REMITTANCES , *COUNTRIES , *PRIVATE sector , *PER capita - Abstract
This paper investigates the effect of financial development on domestic investment in West African countries. The study uses data from 1985 to 2019 and employs the pooled mean group technique. The main finding of the study is that financial development has a positive effect on domestic investment in the long run but an insignificant effect in the short run. Furthermore, remittances, real GDP per capita and trade openness increase investment rate. The results of causality tests support the view that investment is a channel through which financial development stimulates economic growth. Therefore, it is reasonable for the selected countries to formulate policies that promote domestic credit to the private sector in order to ease liquidity constraints and increase investment and economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. How does the digital economy affect the development of the green economy? Evidence from Chinese cities.
- Author
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Liao, Wenqi
- Subjects
- *
HIGH technology industries , *SUSTAINABLE development , *CITIES & towns , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *GROWTH - Abstract
The digital economy may accelerate the upgrading of industrial structures and boost regional innovation output, effectively contributing to China's green economic transformation. The impact of the digital economy on developing the urban green economy is analyzed using data from 280 cities across China from 2010–2019. Using a fixed-effects model and the Spatial Durbin model, the digital economy is found to have a significant impact on urban green economy development. This result is shown to be robust to various factors. There is significant regional variability in the impact of the digital economy on green economic growth, with the strongest impact in the northeast, followed by the central and western regions. Meanwhile, non-resource-based cities and policy pilot cities have a more pronounced role in promoting the digital economy. The intermediate transmission chain of industrial structural upgrading and regional innovation output fosters the growth of the urban green economy via the digital economy. Regional innovation production is responsible for 30.848% of this growth, with the intermediate effect of industrial structural upgrading contributing to 38.155%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The relationship between city size, decentralisation and economic growth.
- Author
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Clifford, John Paul, Doran, Justin, Crowley, Frank, and Jordan, Declan
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC expansion , *CITIES & towns , *DECENTRALIZATION in government , *ECONOMIC indicators , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Purpose: This article examines the links between average city size, fiscal decentralisation, and national economic growth in 33 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. Design/methodology/approach: The data in this paper comprise an unbalanced panel dataset which contains economic growth indicators, average city size, fiscal decentralisation indicators and control variables in 33 OECD member countries from 1975 to 2015 in five-year intervals. Fixed-effects (FE) estimators are used for the analysis. Findings: This research finds i) countries with larger weighted average city sizes have higher economic growth, ii) countries with greater fiscal decentralisation have higher economic growth, but iii) countries with larger weighted average city sizes with greater decentralisation have lower rates of economic growth. Originality/value: The research highlights the importance of agglomerations and decentralised governance and management for economic growth. While the findings are consistent with previous evidence that larger city sizes and fiscal decentralisation are separately associated with higher rates of economic growth, the authors find countries which have larger cities and greater fiscal decentralisation experience lower rates of economic growth highlighting a need for caution on decentralisation agendas in such cases. The implications of this suggest policymakers should proceed with caution on decentralisation agendas in countries with large cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Ecological Economic Analysis of the Ecological Turn in the Development of Modern Civilization.
- Author
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Shengwang ZHANG
- Subjects
- *
MODERN civilization , *ECONOMIC systems , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *SOCIAL systems - Abstract
During the primitive civilization and agricultural civilization periods, the functions and structures of various elements within the ecological and economic system were able to develop synergistically. But humans were always passive in the face of nature and cannot yet break free from its constraints and oppression. During the period of industrial civilization, the contradiction between the unlimited expansion of economic system demand and the relative reduction of ecosystem supply became increasingly severe. Its development model had obvious non ecological economic characteristics, which posed a great threat to the sustainable development of human society. The ecological turn in the development of human civilization is an inevitable trend, and the gradual replacement of industrial civilization by ecological civilization will become an objective fact. Ecological civilization has overcome the non ecological economic nature of industrial civilization and established an ecological economic operation mode that promotes and transforms economic and ecological systems in both directions. It has achieved a perfect combination of ecological operation of social and economic systems and economic operation of natural ecosystems, and harmonious, coordinated, and win-win development of economic society and natural ecology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. An analysis on the relationship between ICT, financial development and economic growth: Evidence from Asian developing countries.
- Author
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Aziz, Tarik, Khan, Md. Gias Uddin, Islam, Md. Toriqul, and Pradhan, Mohammad Abdul Hannan
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion , *PANEL analysis ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC conditions in Asia - Abstract
This study examines the effect of ICT progress on economic growth by constructing an ICT diffusion index. Along with ICT, this study further investigates the role of financial development and the combined impact of ICT and financial development on growth in 10 Asian developing economies covering the period 2001–2017. To analyze the panel data, this study employed the ARDL model and estimated the Pooled Mean Group estimator. The estimated results reveal a significant positive long-run relationship between financial expansion and economic progress. While ICT hurts economic growth on its own, it has a significant positive impact when combined with financial development. The robustness of the results has been verified by Fully-Modified OLS (FMOLS) and Dynamic OLS (DOLS) estimations. To promote enduring economic growth in Asian developing countries, the paper recommends ensuring inclusive financial development combined with modern ICT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Structural transformation and political economy: A new approach to inclusive growth.
- Author
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Kamal, Madiha and Fatima, Ambreen
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY government , *JOB creation , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *ELASTICITY - Abstract
The "Jobless growth" of Pakistan's economy and its acquaintances with frequent changes in different governments in power (both democratic and military regime) and its influence on economic growth persuades to conduct a qualitative analysis of the structural transformation on the disaggregated level to determine whether or not it has any connection or impact on different sectors of the economy. The fundamental objective of this study is to (a) explore how sectoral transformation has affected economic development and employment, as well as their relationships, and (b investigate how these dynamics have impacted the generation of sustainable employment in the economy. For this reason, the study takes sectoral transformation into account. The study applies the sectoral employment Elasticity technique for this objective. The results of our evaluation indicate that the economy functions better under military regimes than it does during democratic periods. The cause might be anything, but our goal is to determine the employment elasticity of Pakistan's main political powers. As an agriculture-based economy, most of the population relies on the agriculture sector; hence, its decline highlights the need for reforms. If this sector doesn't grow by creating additional jobs, it will lose its employment power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Disaggregated energy consumption, environment, and economic growth nexus of emerging South and East Asian Countries: An ARDL approach.
- Author
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Rahaman, Sk Habibur and Chen, Fuzhong
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC expansion , *ENERGY consumption , *CARBON emissions , *REGULATION of financial institutions , *ECONOMIC development , *VECTOR error-correction models - Abstract
This study examines the nexus between disaggregated energy consumption (EC), CO2 emissions, and economic growth in emerging South and East Asian countries over the period of 1994 to 2019. The long‐run equilibrium relationship is determined by using the "Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model" and the "Generalized least square (GLS) technique." The panel causality test developed by "Dumitrescu and Hurlin, 2012" determines the direction of causation between variables. Disaggregated EC and CO2 emissions positively affect economic growth in the research. The PMG estimate also validates the GLS findings, which produce the same results as the PMG estimation. To check the robustness, we also use FMOLS and DOLS estimators. The results confirm the feedback hypothesis for South and East Asian nations regarding energy uses, CO2 emissions, and economic growth. In contrast, there is unidirectional causality between industrial development and economic growth. These findings will help governments in South and East Asia craft effective energy policy regulations for their financial institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Institutional quality, financial development and sustainable economic growth among lower income countries.
- Author
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Pradhan, Rudra P., Nair, Mahendhiran S., Arvin, Mak B., and Hall, John H.
- Subjects
- *
LOW-income countries , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
This article postulates strong endogenous relationships in lower income countries between institutional quality, financial development and sustained economic growth. These associations were investigated using the vector‐error correction model (VECM) and Granger causality method for a sample of 79 countries from 2005 to 2022. The findings show that (1) these variables reinforce each other in the short run. (2) In the long run, both institutional quality and financial development can fuel economic growth. (3) The positive effect of institutional quality on economic growth is greater than that of financial development. Policy implications of these findings are that careful attention should be paid to co‐development policies to enhance the institutional quality and the financial system in these economies. Policies should also consider economic growth strategies to enable sustainable economic growth rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. El papel de las incubadoras como catalizadoras de emprendimientos alto valor agregado en los ecosistemas de innovación.
- Author
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Cabrera Soto, Marian and Souto Anido, Lourdes
- Subjects
- *
SMALL business , *ECONOMIC expansion , *BUSINESS enterprises , *ECONOMIC development , *BUSINESS ecosystems , *BUSINESS incubators , *VALUE creation - Abstract
Today the innovation of processes, products, services, among others, becomes even more relevant for society. To do this, new strategies, connections and agents have been established that make it possible for innovation activities to materialize at each moment of value generation. Incubators are a relatively new device in innovation ecosystems and they arise with the idea that an agent that supports and accompanies these new ideas to fruition is needed. Their conceptualization is not widely known and understanding why they play a vital role in local, regional and sectoral ecosystems is a first step to be able to create better and greater numbers of enterprises that boost the economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
46. Revisiting the finance-growth nexus in Hong Kong: fresh insights from nonparametric analysis.
- Author
-
Almassri, Hamza, Ozdeser, Huseyin, and Saliminezhad, Andisheh
- Subjects
- *
GRANGER causality test , *ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC indicators , *ECONOMIC expansion - Abstract
Purpose: Since financial sector plays a critical economic role in Hong Kong, the current research aims to comprehensively analyze the association between financial development and economic growth in the country to draw correct conclusions about the impact that financial sector's development has on the growth of the economy. This requires both using of more comprehensive data that includes all or nearly all elements of the country's financial sector and utilizing advanced econometrics techniques to provide more reliable evidence based on the findings. In the study, both issues have been addressed more academically to aid the relevant authorities better. Design/methodology/approach: This study empirically examines the financial development-economic growth nexus in Hong Kong employing data covering 1980–2019. The quantile-on-quantile (QQ) approach of Sim and Zhou (2015) is utilized to investigate certain subtle aspects of the association linking financial development and economic growth. In addition, the authors benefit from applying the nonlinear Granger causality test of Diks and Panchenko (2006) to assess the variables' nexus in a nonlinear manner. Findings: In contrast to the evidence of a unidirectional linkage documented in many related studies, the empirical findings suggest that a bi-directional relationship exists between financial development and economic growth for Hong Kong. This is a helpful input for the relevant policymakers and implies that they can set appropriate policies and regulations to balance financial development and economic growth in this country. Originality/value: The originality of this study can be divided into two parts. Methodologically, unlike past studies that utilized mostly linear and parametric methods, the paper contributes to the literature by applying the more robust nonparametric and nonlinear methodologies. Theoretically, most researchers have used various financial development indicators, which led to very different conclusions. Therefore, this study attempts to resolve this deficiency in the literature by using a more comprehensive index for financial development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A simultaneous equations model of the relationship between international trade, and economic growth and development with dynamic policy simulations.
- Author
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Salvatore, Dominick
- Subjects
- *
SIMULTANEOUS equations , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *DYNAMIC simulation - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Nudging the Ship in the Right Direction: United States Public Diplomacy and Development in 1960s Spain.
- Author
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Martín García, Óscar J.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC diplomacy , *NINETEEN sixties , *COLLATERAL security , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
In the early 1960s, Franco's Spain began to experience a rapid process of economic growth, which was encouraged by US diplomacy as it would underpin the stability required by the US defence program in the country. However, American officials felt that such an accelerated economic development should be orderly since chaotic modernization might spark social turmoil that would compromise the US geo-strategic objectives in Spain. The article unravels the US public diplomacy programs to steer Spanish society along with a stable development path based on US-inspired capitalism and alliance with the Western bloc. It examines the cultural, educational, and informational means employed by the US government in a bid to channel the socio-economic upheaval occurring in Spain in a direction that was compatible with US security interests. We also argue that modernization theory provided the ideological and intellectual framework for US persuasion efforts to harness Spain's socio-economic ferment. Nevertheless, the 'development model' promoted by the dictatorship generated inequalities and conflicts that fuelled anti-American sentiment among sectors of Spanish society called to play a role in the future post-Franco transition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. La inversión extranjera directa en China.
- Author
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Rivas Saavedra, Déborah and García Hernández, María Isabel
- Subjects
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ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *FOREIGN investments - Abstract
Foreign direct investment (FDI) currently plays a relevant role in the world economy. During the last decades, several authors have been concerned about the relationship between foreign direct investment and the economic growth of a country. This work aims to identify if there is a correlation among these economic indicators, using China as study country. In order to meet this objective, a characterization of FDI is carried out in the selected country, with emphasis in its dissimilar contributions, and the determinants and incentives for investment. This work covers data fundamentally until 2019, in the context of pre-pandemic COVID-19. In addition, with the use of SPSS Statistics software and databases, a correlation study between the Gross Domestic Product and foreign direct investment has been carried out. As result, a direct and strong correlation between FDI and economic growth is obtained from the Asian country. At the end, there are experiences to following for Cuba. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
50. DEMOCRACY AND ECONOMIC GROWTH IN MIST COUNTRIES: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS.
- Author
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BAYAR, İlyas
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYEE participation in management , *ECONOMIC expansion , *ECONOMIC development , *COUNTRIES , *COINTEGRATION ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Studies on institutions, which are one of the main determinants of economic growth, have been increasing intensively in recent years. In this context, despite many empirical and theoretical studies on the relationship between democracy and economic growth, there is no consensus about the effect of democracy on economic growth. This study analyzes the relationship between democracy and economic growth for MIST (Mexico, Indonesia, South Korea, and Turkey) countries. Firstly, the cross-sectional dependence was examined in the study for the 1973-2021 period. The second generation panel unit root test (Pesaran CADF (2007)) was chosen because of the cross-sectional dependence among the series. The stationarity of the variables at I(1) is ensured. Having determined the cointegration relationship (Westerlund Durbin-H test (2008)) between the series, the Panel CCE estimator was used to estimate the cointegration coefficients. Kónya causality test was used for the causality between democracy and economic growth. It is found that an increase in the level of democracy boosts the economic growth. It is suggested that the MIST nations continue to undertake policies targeted at establishing democratic institutions that contribute to economic progress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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