Imports and Growth in Highly Indebted Countries [electronic resource] : An Empirical Study / by Jesko Hentschel.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783642467707
- 337
- HF1351-1647
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1. Introduction -- 1.1. The debt crisis, imports, and growth -- 1.2. Structure of the study -- 2. The importance of imported factors of production in developing countries -- 2.1. Introductory remarks -- 2.2. The composition of imports -- 2.3. Factors impeding perfect import substitutability -- 2.4. Capital goods -- 2.5. Intermediate goods -- 2.6. Development strategies and the role of imports -- 2.7. Summary -- 3. Import models: issues and problems -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. The theoretical background: imports and growth -- 3.3. The standard import function, foreign exchange availability, and disaggregate import analyses -- 3.4. Empirical studies of imports as factors of production in developing countries -- 3.5. Concluding remarks -- 4. Macroeconomic production functions and elasticities of substitution between imported and domestic factors of production -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Aggregate production functions and the elasticity of substitution -- 4.3. The nested production function -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Estimation of elasticities of substitution between domestic and imported means of production -- 5.1. Introductory remarks -- 5.2. Measurement of the domestic price of imported goods -- 5.3. Imported and domestically produced capital goods -- 5.4. Imported intermediate goods -- 5.5. Summary and interpretation of the empirical results -- 6. Imports, growth, and the trade balance: two case studies -- 6.1. Basic remarks about the framework -- 6.2. The Columbian model -- 6.3. The Ecuadorian model -- 6.4. Concluding remarks about the simulations -- 7. Conclusion -- 7.1. Summary of findings -- 7.2. Import vulnerability reconsidered -- Appendices -- A. Statistical tables -- B. The cost function and conditional factor demands for a CES production function -- B.1. Derived factor demands -- B.2. The cost function -- C. Data sources and computational notes -- C.1. Industrial production and price statistics -- C.2. Trade data -- C.3. National income accounting statistics -- C.4. Specific variables used in Chapter 5 -- C.4.1. Implicit average effective import taxes -- C.4.2. Real import capacity -- C.4.3. Interest rates -- C.5. Variable defmitions and sources, Chapter 6 -- C.6. Computational notes -- References.
A real imports of capital and intermediate goods declined sharply for highlyindebted countries in the 1980s, these economies were faced with the need tosubstitute previously imported factors of production with domestic capital and labor. The study empirically analyzes the degree of import dependence of twelve developing countries. Estimates of the short-run elasticity of substitution characterize both imported capital and intermediate goods to behave like complements in the production process in the developing countries. Long-run substitution elasticites differ considerably among the group of economies, especially for imported machinery and equipment. The results indicate that inward-oriented strategies have not achieved the aim of reducing the import dependence of the developing economies. In order to visualize theimplications of the differing degree of import dependence, a partial equilibrium econometric model is used to analyze the reaction of the trade account on external shocks and domestic policies in Columbia and Ecuador. Simulations show that the dependence on imported production means can transform an "adjustment with growth" of the external account intoan "adjustment or growth" controversy.
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