The Lack of Convergence of Latin-America Compared with CESEE: Is Low Investment to Blame?

The Lack of Convergence of Latin-America Compared with CESEE: Is Low Investment to Blame?
READ MORE...
Volume/Issue: Volume 2020 Issue 098
Publication date: June 2020
ISBN: 9781513547886
$18.00
Add to Cart by clicking price of the language and format you'd like to purchase
Available Languages and Formats
paperback else
pdf else
epub else
English
Prices in red indicate formats that are not yet available but are forthcoming.
Topics covered in this book

This title contains information about the following subjects. Click on a subject if you would like to see other titles with the same subjects.

Labor , Economics- Macroeconomics , WP , capital deepening , Economic Convergence , Growth , TFP , human capital , TFP growth , capital input , ratio rise , output indicator , Human capital , Total factor productivity , Capital productivity , Personal income , Business environment , Western Europe , South America , Global , East Asia , Southeast Asia , TFP difference , TFP level , levels in CESEE

Summary

In the last few decades there has been little convergence of income levels in Latin America with those in the United States, in sharp contrast with both emerging Asia and emerging Europe. This paper argues that lack of convergence was not the result of low investment. Latin America is poorer because of lower human capital levels and lower TFP—not because of a lower capital-output ratio. Cross-country differences of TFP in turn are associated with differences in human capital, governance and business climate indicators. We demonstrate that once levels of human capital and governance are taken into account, there is strong conditional cross-country convergence. Poor countries with high levels of human capital, governance or business climate indicators converge rapidly. Poor countries without those attributes do not. We show that low investment is the result of low TFP and thus GDP growth—not the cause.