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This paper tests a neo-Schumpeterian model with industry-level data to analyze how Brazil, India, and China are … competition to spur catch-up. In comparison, Brazil, which was as rich as South Korea, and India, which was as rich as China in … 1980, are catching up more slowly. Import-substitution industrialization strategies saddled Brazil and India with a large …
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/capita, shares in world trade and market capitalization attributable both jointly and single to China, India, and Brazil (the three … time. In contrast the North‐China gap falls from 57.2 to 13.1 between 1990 and 2009, and India from 70.4 to 38.1 using … market exchange rates and from 23.4 to 5.5 for China and from 20.7 to 11.4 for India using PPP rates. We calculate the …
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dataset. More than the catching-up effect, we will measure the convergence for three emerging countries: Brazil/China/India … past 10 years. A first contribution is that as the distance between the level of labor productivity in Brazil (China, India …
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This paper tests a neo-Schumpeterian model with industry-level data to analyze how Brazil, India, and China are … competition to spur catch-up. In comparison, Brazil, which was as rich as South Korea, and India, which was as rich as China in … 1980, are catching up more slowly. Import-substitution industrialization strategies saddled Brazil and India with a large …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013009062