Could Imports be Beneficial for Economic Growth? Some Evidence from Republic of Koreav
Kim, Sangho; Lim, Hyunjoon; Park, Donghyun | October 2007
Abstract
The Republic of Korea is widely seen as a classical example of East Asia’s export-driven economic growth. The focus in the literature on exports in the economy’s growth has led to an almost complete neglect of the role of imports. This study investigates the relationship between exports, imports, and economic growth using quarterly data from 1980 to 2003. Results indicate that imports have a significant positive effect on productivity growth but exports do not. Furthermore, the evidence reveals that the productivity-enhancing impact of imports is due to competitive pressures arising from consumer good imports and technological transfers embodied in capital good imports from developed countries. Most of the study’s results still hold using gross domestic product growth rather than productivity growth as the measure of economic growth. The evidence implies that under certain circumstances, import liberalization can make a positive and significant contribution to growth and development.
Citation
Kim, Sangho; Lim, Hyunjoon; Park, Donghyun. 2007. Could Imports be Beneficial for Economic Growth? Some Evidence from Republic of Koreav. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1864. License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.ISSN
1655-5252
Keywords
Asian Development Bank
Development
Trade
Development Goals
Skills Development
Sustainable Development
Trade Flows
Trade And Development
Food Security And Trade
Trade Volume
Trade Potential
Trade Flows
External Trade
Industrial policy
New technology
Innovations
Industry
Export policy
Import policy
Development assistance
ADB
Curriculum development
Development assistance
Development aid
Development indicators
Development potential
Development models
Project appraisal
Performance appraisal
Regional development bank
Trade development
Import volume
Export volume
Capital
Business
Communication in rural development
Social participation
Occupational training
Partnership
Joint venture
System analysis
Labor and globalization
Labor policy
Regional trading blocs
Foreign trade and employment
Developing countries
Industrial priorities
Technological innovation
Technology transfer
Foreign trade regulation
Industrial relations
Show allCollapse
Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1864Metadata
Show full item recordUsers also downloaded
-
Poverty Reduction Strategies—Lessons from the Asian and Pacific Region on Inclusive Development
Chatterjee, Shiladitya (Asian Development Bank, 2005-06)The Asian and Pacific region has made remarkable advances in reducing poverty. This paper surveys the main contributions that attempt to explain the causes behind the region’s success in poverty reduction, and assesses the impact of inclusive development policies pursued. Looking broadly at the different experiences of East and Southeast Asia on one hand and South Asia on the other, the paper ...The Asian and Pacific region has made remarkable advances in reducing poverty. This paper surveys the main contributions that attempt to explain the causes behind the region’s success in poverty reduction, and assesses the impact of inclusive development ... -
Policies for Private Sector Development in Indonesia
Wie, Thee Kian (Asian Development Bank, 2006-03-15)Private sector development and investment in the sense of tapping private sector efforts and investment for promoting economic development is crucial to spurring economic growth and reducing absolute poverty. Combined with public sector efforts, private investment, particularly in competitive markets, has great potential to contribute to growth. Private markets function as the engine of economic ...Private sector development and investment in the sense of tapping private sector efforts and investment for promoting economic development is crucial to spurring economic growth and reducing absolute poverty. Combined with public sector efforts, private ... -
Outward Foreign Direct Investment and the Financial Crisis in Developing East Asia. Asian Development Review, Vol. 26(2), pp. 1-25
Hill, Hal; Jongwanich, Juthathip (Asian Development Bank, 2009-08-29)This paper examines two interrelated aspects of Asian economic dynamism and the management of external shocks, in the context of outward foreign direct investment (FDI) from developing East Asia. Outward FDI from these economies has been growing rapidly, driven by deeper economic integration, more open FDI regimes, growing technological and financial sophistication, and rising savings levels. ...This paper examines two interrelated aspects of Asian economic dynamism and the management of external shocks, in the context of outward foreign direct investment (FDI) from developing East Asia. Outward FDI from these economies has been growing ...