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Convergence, Total Factor Productivity and Industrial Growth: Growth Empirics in Post-Reform China

Author Hong Chen
Publisher LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
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Book Details
Author(s)Hong Chen
ISBN / ASIN3848422808
ISBN-139783848422807
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank11,549,063
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This thesis examines the Chinese economy by focusing on three issues: convergence, total factor productivity (TFP) and industrial growth. Based on China’s 28 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions (henceforth ‘provinces’) over 1979-2004, the analysis of convergence discovered the share of physical capital in China’s output of 0.23 and convergence rate of 5.6 per cent per annum. The analysis of TFP found that TFP growth in the Eastern and Central Zones was accomplished mainly through technical progress rather than efficiency improvement, while the pattern was completely different in the least developed Western Zone. For China as a whole, TFP grew at a rate of 2.75 per cent per annum, which accounted for 30.02 per cent of its real GDP growth. And the study of industrial growth of 26 industries in 9 provinces of the Eastern Zone over 2001-2005 suggested that the dynamic externalities, such as industrial specialization, competition and industrial spillovers across provinces, played an important role in province-industrial growth. Province-specific externalities, including exports, education, local market size and transport infrastructure, spurred industrial growth.