Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
988187 | Structural Change and Economic Dynamics | 2012 | 15 Pages |
Technology spillovers offer great opportunities for economic growth to developing countries that do little, if any, R&D activity. This paper explores the extent to which these countries benefit from foreign technology, the diffusion mechanisms involved, and the factors that shape their absorption capabilities. Results based on a non-stationary panel of 55 developing countries indicate that the benefits are quite substantial: a ten-percent increase in foreign R&D stock is translated into more than a two-percent increase in aggregate productivity. Of the diffusion channels considered, imports appear to be more conducive to R&D spillover. In addition, developing countries that enjoy larger benefits tend to exhibit larger stock of human capital, more openness to trade and foreign activities, and stronger institutions. These North–South R&D spillovers, although larger than previously suggested, appear less strong than North–North spillovers, adding to the general literature on economic divergence between developed and developing countries.
Research highlights► The paper focuses on North–South technology diffusion. ► The spillover gains are found to be quite substantial, and the main diffusion channel is trade. ► The extent of these gains depends on trade intensity, human capital, and institutions.