A Glimpse on Sectoral Convergence of Productivity Levels
Gerald Müller
IWH Discussion Papers,
Nr. 133,
2001
Abstract
This paper examines the presence of sectoral convergence of labor productivity between 14 OECD countries. Using the OECD International Sectoral Data Base (ISDB), the paper looks at the developments within 12 distinct sectors during the period 1970-1995. The change of the coefficients of variance suggests that there is strong sectoral convergence within most service sectors while the evidence of convergence for Manufacturing as well as for Communication is rather weak. These findings are in line with most studies undertaken on this subject so far. It is concluded that economic theories at hand to explain growth and convergence (or divergence respectively) are of different importance for the sectors concerned. While models of the New Growth Theory seemed to be useful to explain growth mechanisms within Manufacturing and Communication, traditional models seemed to apply to most other sectors.
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Foreign Banks in Economic Development: Experiences from the Regulated Financial System of South Korea
Ralf Müller
IWH Discussion Papers,
Nr. 110,
2000
Abstract
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Revenue Implications of Trade Liberalization
L. Ebrill, Reint E. Gropp, J. Stotsky
IMF Occasional Papers, No. 180,
Nr. 180,
1999
Abstract
In recent decades many countries have dismantled trade barriers and opened their economies to international competition. Trade liberalization is seen to promote economic efficiency, international competitiveness, and an expansion of trade, perhaps especially in imperfectly competitive markets. Yet despite this progress in trade liberalization, as evidenced by the conclusion of the Uruguay Round in 1994 and the establishment of the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 1995, trade barriers are still widespread. Some economies and some sectors (e.g., agriculture in many industrial countries) remain relatively insulated from the global economy by a variety of nontariff and tariff barriers, even as import substitution continues to lose ground as a strategy for economic development.
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Pathways to Capitalism – Explaining the Difference in the Economic Development of the Visegrád States, the States of the Former Soviet Union and China
Silke Tober, Hansjörg Herr
Externe Publikationen,
1999
Abstract
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Economic Transition in Hungary and East Germany – Gradualism and Shock Therapy in Catch-Up Development. Studies
Johannes Stephan
Economic Transition,
1999
Abstract
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A Strategy for Economic Transformation and Development
Silke Tober, Hansjörg Herr, Andreas Westphal
Externe Publikationen,
1994
Abstract
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