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IMPORT LIBERALIZATION AND PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH IN INDIAN MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES IN THE 1990s
150
Citations
12
References
2003
Year
Resource ProductivityProductivity GrowthIndustrial PolicyApplied EconomicsIndustrialisationEconomic DevelopmentTradeEconomic IntegrationAgricultural EconomicsEducationEndogenous Growth TheoryEconomic GrowthIndustrial OrganizationProductivityProductivity EconomicsEffective ProtectionEconomic AnalysisGestation LagsInternational BusinessEconomicsTechnical ChangeTrade LiberalizationIndustrial DevelopmentBusinessEconometricsGrowth Theory
Total factor productivity growth in Indian manufacturing decelerated in the 1990s, a decade of major economic reforms in India. Econometric analysis presented in the paper indicates that the lowering of effective protection to industries favorably affected productivity growth. The results suggest that gestation lags in investment projects and slower agricultural growth in the 1990s had an adverse effect on productivity growth. The analysis reveals that underutilization of industrial capacity was an important cause of the productivity slowdown. With corrections for capacity utilization, the estimated productivity growth in the 1990s is found to be about the same as in the 1980s.
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