Register  |  Login  |  Inquiries  |  Sitemap |  
Advanced Search
Journal of Economic Integration 2002 April;17(4) :650-670.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.11130/jei.2002.17.4.650
North-South Trade, Knowledge Spillovers and Growth

Rod Falvey Neil Foster David Greenaway 

University of Nottingham
University of Vienna.
Copyright ©2002 Journal of Economic Integration
ABSTRACT
The endogenous growth literature has stimulated empirical research into links between trade and growth in general and international knowledge spillovers in particular. Results relating to the latter have been mixed and the issue of the appropriate construction of the spillover variable remains contentious. In this paper we develop measures taking account of whether knowledge is a public or private good in the donor and recipient countries, and include these in a dynamic panel model of growth. For a sample of five OECD donor countries and 52 developing recipient countries, we conclude that it matters little whether we treat knowledge as a private or public good in the donor but that spillovers, if they exist, act as a public good in the recipient. We also find that the level of trade is important in facilitating knowledge spillovers from donors to recipients. JEL Classifications (F43, O30, O40)
Keywords: Knowledge Spillovers | Economic Growth | International Trade | Dynamic Panel Data
 
REFERENCE
1. Bevan, D., Collier, P. and J. W. Gunning (1993). "Trade Shocks in Developing Countries: Consequences and Policy Responses", European Economic Review, 37, 557-565.
2. Coe, David T., and Elhanan Helpman (1995). "International R&D Spillovers", European Economic Review, 39, 859-887.
3. Coe, David T., Helpman, E., and Alexander W. Hoffmaister (1997). "North-South R&D Spillovers," Economic Journal, 107, 134-150.
TOOLS
PDF Links  PDF Links
Full text via DOI  Full text via DOI
Download Citation  Download Citation
  Print
Share:      
METRICS
18
Crossref
0
Scopus
4,831
View
31
Download
World’s Knowledge Spillovers: Beyond Openness and Growth  2014 June;29(2)
Editorial Office
Center for Economic Integration, Sejong University, 209, Neungdong-Ro, Gwangjin-Gu,
Seoul, 05006, Korea
TEL : +82-2-3408-3338    FAX : +82-2-6935-2492   E-mail : editorial.office@e-jei.org
Browse Articles |  Current Issue |  For Authors and Reviewers |  About
Copyright© by Center for Economic Integration.      Developed in M2PI