Exports, imports, government consumption and economic growth in upper-middle income countries

Esfahani (1991) shows that the statistically significant correlation between export promotion and economic growth in semi-industrialized countries (SICs) has been mainly attributable to the role of exports in reducing import ‘shortages’, which have impeded output growth in these countries. As a resu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in development studies 2014-04, Vol.14 (2), p.197-204
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description Esfahani (1991) shows that the statistically significant correlation between export promotion and economic growth in semi-industrialized countries (SICs) has been mainly attributable to the role of exports in reducing import ‘shortages’, which have impeded output growth in these countries. As a result, export-promotion policies as a superior development strategy in SICs play an important role in those that cannot secure sufficient foreign aid or investment. Esfahani (1991) also develops a simultaneous equations model to address the simultaneity bias between GDP and export growth rates. In this article we extend the model developed by Esfahani (1991) by incorporating the contribution of government consumption to output growth and test it using a sample of 27 upper-middle income economies.
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source Business Source Complete; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Bias
Consumption
Correlation
Development strategies
Economic growth
Expenditures
Exports
GDP
Government spending
Gross Domestic Product
Growth models
Growth rates
Imports
Industrialized countries
International trade
Per capita
Studies
Trade liberalization
Trade policy
title Exports, imports, government consumption and economic growth in upper-middle income countries
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