1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910810765203321

Autore

Che Natasha

Titolo

Factor Endowment, Structural Coherence, and Economic Growth / / Natasha Che

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2012

ISBN

1-4755-9236-1

1-4755-9630-8

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (43 p.)

Collana

IMF Working Papers

Disciplina

332

Soggetti

Factor proportions - Econometric models

Economic development

Labor

Public Finance

Production and Operations Management

Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth

Employment

Unemployment

Wages

Intergenerational Income Distribution

Aggregate Human Capital

Aggregate Labor Productivity

Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General

Human Capital

Skills

Occupational Choice

Labor Productivity

Production

Cost

Capital and Total Factor Productivity

Capacity

Macroeconomics

Labour

income economics

Public finance & taxation

Capital productivity

Information technology in revenue administration

Human capital

Total factor productivity



Revenue administration

Revenue

Economic theory

Industrial productivity

United States

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; IMF Working Paper; I. INTRODUCTION; II. AN ILLUSTRATIVE MODEL; III. DATA AND VARIABLES; Table; Table 1:Cross-country median industry size growth and capital intensity; Table 2: Evolution of labor income share over time; Figure; Figure 1: Evolution of labor income share by country; Figure 2: Change of shares in total capital by capital types 1970 - 2005; Figure 3: Capital intensity by country and types of capital; Table 3: Regression of capital intensity on country capital endowment by industry; Table 4A: Summary statistics; Table 4B: Correlation between country variables

IV. COUNTRY LEVEL ANALYSIS A. Capital Endowment and Industrial Structure; Table 4C: Correlation between industry variables; Table 5a: Correlation between capital intensity of industrial structure and capital endowment; Table 5b: Correlation between capital intensity of industrial structure and capital endowment; B. Structural Coherence and Growth; Measuring Structural Incoherence at the Country Level; Table 6: Summary statistics of structural incoherence (SI) scores; Structural Coherence Effect on Growth; Figure 4: Evolution of structural incoherence score by country

Figure 5: Decomposing the structural incoherence score Table 7a: Structural coherence and growth: country level regressions (v1); Table 7b: Structural coherence and growth: country level regressions (v2); Table 8a: Structural coherence and growth: country level regressions (v1), IV method; Table 8b: Structural coherence and growth: country level regressions (v2), IV method; Figure 6a: GDP growth and structural incoherence (annual); Figure 6b: GDP growth and structural incoherence (5-year window); V. INDUSTRY LEVEL ANALYSIS; A. Capital Endowment and Industrial Structure

Figure 6c: GDP growth and structural incoherence (10-year window)Table 8: Overall capital and structural change: baseline estimation; Table 9: Detailed types of capital and structural change: baseline estimation; B. Structural Coherence and Economic Growth; Table 10: Structural coherence and economic growth: baseline estimates; VI. ROBUSTNESS; A. Using income share to measure factor intensity; Table 11: Capital endowments and structural change: alternative measure of capital intensity; Table 12: Structural coherence and economic growth: alternative measure of capital intensity

B. Further Robustness ChecksTable 13: Overall capital endowment and structural change: additional controls; Table 14: Detailed capital endowments and structural change: additional controls; Table 15A: Structural coherence and growth: additional controls; Table 15B: Structural coherence and growth: additional controls; VII. CONCLUSION; References



Sommario/riassunto

This paper studies the linkage between structural coherence and economic growth. Structural coherence is defined as the degree that a country's industrial structure optimally reflects its factor endowment fundamentals. The paper found that at least for the overall capital, the shares of capital intensive industries were significantly bigger with higher initial capital endowment and faster capital accumulation. Moreover, there is a positive relationship between a country's aggregate output growth and the degree of structural coherence. Quantitatively, the structural coherence with respect to the overall capital explains about 30% of the growth differential among sample countries.