Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Main Campus Library | University of Eastern Africa, Baraton | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3846 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 60249 |
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Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3817 Unpackaging demand for water service quality : | Spc Hg 3881.5 .W57 no.3822 Telecommunications performance, reforms, and governance / | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3842 Does migration reshape expenditures in rural households?evidence from Mexico. / | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3846 New product technology, accumulation, and growth / | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no. 3849 Determinants of deposit-insurance adoption and design / | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3850 Do regional trade pacts benefit the poor? an illustration from the Dominican Republic-Central American free trade agreement in Nicaragua / | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no.3851 The return to firm investment in human capital / |
Also available online.
"This paper asks whether new technological capacity for producing and exporting additional products provides incentives for greater capital accumulation, without being fully reflected in a higher rate of total factor productivity (TFP) growth. Using a highly disaggregated data set of each Country's trade flows into the United States, the author constructs a direct and independent measure of technological improvements for each country over time based on the number of new product varieties exported to the United States. The author shows, in a panel data setting, that acquiring the technological capacity for producing new products stimulates more rapid capital accumulation in developing Countries, even after holding fixed the rate of TFP growth. His findings provide evidence against the alternative view that technological improvements are essentially unimportant: a view based on the f
Includes bibliographical references.
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