Growth, structural change and technological capabilities Latin America in a comparative perspective


Autoria(s): Cimoli, Mario; Porcile, Gabriel; Primi, Annalisa; Vergara, Sebastián; Brito, Márcio Holland de
Data(s)

16/06/2010

16/06/2010

16/06/2010

Resumo

Countries differ in terms of technological capabilities and complexity of production structures. According to that, countries may follow different development strategies: one based on extracting rents from abundant endowments, such as labor or natural resources, and the other focused on creating rents through intangibles, basically innovation and knowledge accumulation. The present article studies international convergence and divergence, linking structural change with trade and growth through a North South Ricardian model. The analysis focuses on the asymmetries between Latin America and mature and catching up economies. Empirical evidence supports that a shift in the composition of the production structure in favor of R&D intensive sectors allows achieving higher rates of growth in the long term and increases the capacity to respond to demand changes. A virtuous export-led growth requires laggard countries to reduce the technological gap with respect to more advanced ones. Hence, abundance of factor endowments requires to be matched with technological capabilities development for countries to converge in the long term.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/6683

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

Textos para Discussão;212

Palavras-Chave #Latin America, #Structural change #Technological capabilities #Growth #Economia
Tipo

Working Paper