Escobar, Octavio ;
Mühlen, Henning
Decomposing a decomposition : within-country differences and the role of structural change in productivity growth
Bitte beziehen Sie sich beim Zitieren dieses Dokumentes immer auf folgende
URN: urn:nbn:de:bsz:100-opus-16095
URL: http://opus.uni-hohenheim.de/volltexte/2019/1609/
pdf-Format:
|
|
|
Gedruckte Ausgabe: |
|
|
Dokument in Google Scholar suchen: |
|
|
Social Media: |
|
|
Export: |
|
|
Abrufstatistik: |
|
|
SWD-Schlagwörter: |
| Strukturwandel , Wirtschaftswachstum , Wirtschaftsentwicklung , Mexiko |
Freie Schlagwörter (Englisch): |
| Decomposition approach , economic development , labor reallocation , regional differences , structural change |
Institut: |
| Institut für Volkswirtschaftslehre |
DDC-Sachgruppe: |
| Wirtschaft |
Dokumentart: |
| ResearchPaper |
Schriftenreihe: |
| Hohenheim discussion papers in business, economics and social sciences |
Bandnummer: |
| 2019,05 |
Sprache: |
| Englisch |
Erstellungsjahr: |
| 2019 |
Publikationsdatum: |
| 09.04.2019 |
|
Lizenz: |
|
Veröffentlichungsvertrag mit der Universitätsbibliothek Hohenheim
|
|
Kurzfassung auf Englisch: |
| In this article, we investigate the relevance of structural change in country wide productivity growth considering within-country differences. For this purpose, we propose a two-step decomposition approach that accounts for differences among subnational units. To highlight the relevance of our procedure compared to the prevalent approach in the existing development literature (which usually neglects subnational differences), we show an application with data for the Mexican economy. Specifically, we contrast findings obtained from country-sector data on the one hand with those obtained from (more disaggregated) state-sector data on the other hand. One main insight is that the qualitative and quantitative results differ substantially between the two approaches. Our procedure reveals that structural change appeared to be growth-reducing during the period from 2005 to 2016. We show that this negative effect is driven mainly by the reallocation of (low-skilled) labor within subnational units. |
© 1996 - 2016 Universität
Hohenheim. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.
10.01.24 |