169 research outputs found

    An Empirical Analysis of Income Convergence in the European Union

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    In this paper, we investigate the convergence process within the European Union (27 countries). More particularly, we study the convergence process of the new entrants from Central and Eastern Europe and of the 15 Western countries between 1990 and 2007. Applying a panel approach to the convergence equation derived by Mankiw et al. (1992) from the Solow model, we highlight the existence of heterogeneity in the European Union and show that new entrants and former members of the European Union can be seen as belonging to significantly differ ent groups of convergence. The existence of heterogeneity in the European Union or the Eurozone might affect their stability as the recent Greece’s sovereign debt crisis illustrates it.

    A calibrated Growth Model of Global Imbalances

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    Global imbalances are considered as one of the main culprits of the financial crisis which started in the United States in 2007. This paper aims to build a two- country deterministic growth framework with overlapping generations to investigate the macroeconomic effects of global imbalances that originate from forced saving in one country. This framework allows us to study the existence of a dynamic equi- librium with global imbalances, the impact on the world interest rate, and the short-run and long-run welfare implications on the young and old generations in both countries. In particular, we show that global imbalances worsen the welfare of the young generations of both countries in the short run and can offset the potential gain of the international integration of capital markets.

    Stock Markets, Banks and Long Run Economic Growth: A Panel Cointegration-Based Analysis

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    The aim of this paper is to investigate the long run relationship between the development of banks and stock markets and economic growth. We make use of the Groen and Kleibergen (2003) panel cointegration methodology to test the number of cointegrating vectors among these three variables for 5 developing countries. In addition, we test the direction of potential causality between financial and economic development. Our results conclude to the existence of a single cointegrating vector between financial development and growth and of causality going from financial development to economic growth. We find little evidence of reverse causation as well as bi-directional causality.

    A Growth Model of Global Imbalances

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    Advertising, innovation and economic growth

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    Este artículo analiza las consecuencias que los gastos publicitarios tienen para la dinámica empresarial y el crecimiento económico, a través de la interacción entre la publicidad y los gastos en investigación y desarrollo (I+D) en las empresas. Presentamos un modelo de crecimiento económico endógeno con heterogeneidad entre empresas que incorpora decisiones sobre gastos en publicidad. Calibramos el modelo usando microdatos para Estados Unidos, con el fin de estudiar patrones empíricos existentes entre empresas de distinto tamaño. Mediante la interacción entre publicidad e I+D, nuestro modelo propone una nueva explicación para la correlación negativa observada en los datos entre la intensidad innovadora y el tamaño empresarial. Nuestro modelo predice que los gastos en publicidad y en I+D son sustitutos en las empresas. Reducir costes publicitarios conlleva una reducción de inversión en I+D, así como una ralentización del crecimiento económico. A continuación, presentamos la evidencia empírica que demuestra la existencia de dicha sustitución mediante el uso de variación regional exógena en la política impositiva estadounidense referente a gastos en I+D. Finalmente, demostramos que los subsidios a la innovación son más efectivos en una economía que permita a las empresas publicitar sus productos respecto a una en la que la publicidad no esté permitidaThis paper analyzes the implications of advertising for firm dynamics and economic growth through its interaction with R&D investment at the firm level. We develop a model of endogenous growth with firm heterogeneity that incorporates advertising decisions. We calibrate the model to match several empirical regularities across firm size using U.S. data. Through a novel interaction between R&D and advertising, our model provides microfoundations for the empirically observed negative relationship between both firm R&D intensity and growth, and firm size. Our model predicts substitutability between R&D and advertising at the firm level. Lower advertising costs are associated with lower R&D investment and slower economic growth. We provide empirical evidence supporting substitution between R&D and advertising using exogenous changes in the tax treatment of R&D expenditures across U.S. states. Finally, we find that R&D subsidies are more effective under an economy that includes advertising relative to one with no advertisin

    A note on relationship between economic activity and stock market development: A case of euro area countries

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    The aim of the paper is to empirically examine if the causal relationship between economic activity and stock market development exists in the selected 11 EA countries. The existence of relationship is investigated with the use of cointegration, vector error correction model and Granger causality during three sub-periods between January 1993 and January 2017. The results show that the general conclusion on the relation between activity and stock market development cannot be stated and that country-specific development should be taken into account when making decisions either from the investors' or policy makers' perspective. It also seems that the level of integration plays important role when studying the nature of relationship between variables during different time periods.O

    From discrete to continuous-time transition matrices in intra-distribution dynamics analysis: an application to per capita wealth in europe

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    Previous studies focusing on the intra-distribution dynamics analysis have usually computed, in a Markov chain framework, discrete-time transition matrices. Such an approach, however, can involve some limitations, especially when using stock variables. In order to illustrate the importance of the time-scale issue when estimating transition matrices, this paper applies both discrete and continuoustime approaches to a set of cross-national European data on per capita wealth for the period 2000–10. The results reveal, on the one hand, that the continuous-time estimation provides a most accurate estimation of transition probabilities and, on the other, that the differences between both approaches are especially remarkable in the long-term equilibrium distribution
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