The Japanese Economic Review

NON‐SCALE EFFECTS OF INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGICAL‐KNOWLEDGE DIFFUSION ON SOUTHERN GROWTH AND WAGES

First published: 19 August 2010
Cited by: 1

Faculdade de Economia and CEFUP (Centro de Economia e Finanças da Universidade do Porto, Portugal) is supported by the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, Portugal.

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Abstract

We develop a dynamic, general equilibrium non‐scale endogenous growth model of North–South technological‐knowledge diffusion by imitation. Countries differ in levels of exogenous productivity, human‐capital levels and R&D capacity. Growth is driven by Northern innovative R&D and the South converges towards the North. Growth is also driven by human‐capital accumulation, scale effects are removed, imitation is only feasible once a threshold distance to the frontier has been attained and is dependent on the South's relative level of employed human capital and on domestic policies promoting R&D. Imitation promotes partial convergence of inter‐country wages and governs the path of intra‐South wage inequality.

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