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Convergence and Catching Up in South-East Asia: A Comparative Analysis
10
Citations
16
References
2000
Year
South Asian CultureEast Asian StudiesEconomic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsEndogenous Growth TheoryIndia-asia CollisionEconomic GrowthProductivityConvergence ClubRegional ResearchLanguage StudiesComparative AnalysisIndustrial EconomyEconomicsSeveral Convergence ClubsInternational RelationsEconomic TrendIncome Convergence HypothesisEast Asian LanguagesGlobalizationSouth Asian StudiesMacroeconomicsBusinessGrowth TheoryEconomic ChangeTechnologyRegional IntegrationEast Asia
The increasing diversity of average growth rates and income levels across countries has generated a large literature on testing the income convergence hypothesis. Most countries in South-East Asia, particularly the five founding ASEAN member countries (ASEAN-5), have experienced substantial economic growth, with the pace of growth having varied substantially across countries. Recent empirical studies have found evidence of several convergence clubs, in which per capita incomes have converged for selected groupings of countries and regions. This paper applies different time series tests of convergence to determine if there is a convergence club for ASEAN-5, as well as ASEAN-5 plus the USA. The catching up hypothesis states that the lagging country, with low initial income and productivity levels, will tend to grow more rapidly by copying the technology of the leader country, without having to bear the associated costs of research and development. Given the important effects of technological change on growth, this paper also examines whether ASEAN-5 is catching up technologically to the USA.
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