Volume 23, Issue 4 p. 1696-1724
REGULAR ARTICLE

Manufacturing growth accelerations in developing countries

Nobuya Haraguchi,

The United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), Vienna, Austria

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Bruno Martorano,

Corresponding Author

Graduate School of Governance, University of Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands

United Nations University—Maastricht Economic and Social Research Institute on Inovation and Technology (UNU-MERIT), Maastricht, The Netherlands

Correspondence

Bruno Martorano, UNU-MERIT, Boschstraat 24, 6211 AX Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Email: martorano@merit.unu.edu

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Marco Sanfilippo,

University of Bari, Bari Italy and University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium

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Anirudh Shingal,

Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER), New Delhi, India

European University Institute, Florence, Italy

University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom

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First published: 16 September 2019
Citations: 2

Funding information:

We acknowledge financial support by the Government of Japan through the Development Cooperation Trust Fund.

Abstract

This paper investigates the factors driving manufacturing growth accelerations in a sample of 134 developing countries over the period 1970 to 2014. We first identify growth acceleration episodes of manufacturing value added (MVA) by their year of initiation and according to a country’s income classification. We then estimate a probit model to explain what factors predict these MVA growth accelerations. Our results show that human capital and institutions represent contextual factors that favor the growth of manufacturing, together with macroeconomic policies related to investment, and openness to foreign trade and capital. We also find that most of these factors not only foster episodic accelerations of industry, but they contribute as well to a sustained process of industrialization that characterized the process of economic growth of a few successful countries over the period 1970 to 2014.

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