The structuralist revenge: economic complexity as an important
The structuralist revenge: economic complexity as an important dimension to evaluate growth and development - Download as a PDF or view online for free
This working paper brings elements from the economic complexity literature to the discussions of the structuralist tradition on the central role of manufacturing and productive sophistication to economic growth. Using data provided by the Atlas of Economic Complexity this study sought to verify if countries’ complexity is important to explain convergence and divergence among poor and rich countries and, if so, which are the countries that will be able to reduce the income gap compared to developed countries. The econometric analysis revealed that exports and production complexity is significant to explain convergence and divergence among countries.
Authors: Autor
Gala, Paulo
Rocha, Igor
Magacho, Guilherme
FGV's Sao Paulo School of Economics (EESP)
Daron Acemoglu, David Laibson, John A. List-Economics-Pearson International
The structuralist revenge: economic complexity as an important dimension to evaluate growth and development
As the only BRIC country Russia discontinues Developmentalism for
Monthly Review COVID-19 and Catastrophe Capitalism
Frontiers Using Participatory System Dynamics Modeling to Address Complex Conservation Problems: Tiger Farming as a Case Study
Opinion The Men — and Boys — Are Not Alright - The New York Times
PDF) Do Knowledge Externalities lead to growth in Economic Complexity? Empirical evidence from Colombia.
The structuralist revenge: economic complexity as an important dimension to evaluate growth and development
Alan Díaz Alva: Technics and Contingency – Media Theory
PDF) Is Europe disintegrating? Macroeconomic divergence, structural polarization, trade and fragility