O10 - Economic Development: GeneralReturn

Results 1 to 6 of 6:

Investigating Spatial-Temporal Pattern and Inducing Factors to Green Technology Innovation and High-Quality Economic Development

Chen Yang, Xu Shaorui, Ali Farhan

Prague Economic Papers 2022, 31(3):296-323 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.807

Green development prioritizes ecology and sustainability and strengthens scientific and technological innovation to drive high-quality economic development. This paper con- structs a coupled coordination model of a system evaluation index to explore the spatial and temporal pattern of green technology innovation and high-quality economic development. it also employs a Tobit regression model to analyse the influencing factors of coordinated development further. For this purpose, panel data on 30 Chinese provincial administrative regions were selected, ranging from 2010 to 2019. The results indicate that the level of coupling and coordination of green technology innovation with high-quality economic quality shows a steady upward trend and the evolution trend of "basic, moderate, and high coordination". At the same time, differences in coordinated development between regions are obvious, showing a development trend of "high in the east and low in the west". It is affected positively by the industrial structure, urbanization level, economic development level, R&D investment, foreign investment and education investment. In contrast, energy consumption has inhibited the coordinated development of green technology innovation and a high-quality economy coupling.

Impact of Institutions on Economic Growth Across OECD Countries

Óscar Afonso, Inês Almeida, Natércia Fortuna

Prague Economic Papers 2021, 30(6):654-674 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.789

This paper provides empirical evidence in support of the view that quality of institutions is an important determinant of medium and long-term growth in OECD countries. Regarding the methodology, a panel data analysis with two-stage least squares (2SLS) estimation will be used to account for the endogeneity of the institutional variable. Besides institutional quality, we also consider other relevant determinants of potential growth such as the initial level of GDP per capita, public debt, and structural variables typically referred to in economic growth theory. Our estimation results show a positive impact of institutions on subsequent economic growth: an increase in 1 point in institutional quality leads to an estimated increase of 16.88 percentage points in potential GDP per capita growth, in the case of high-debt countries. With this, we notice a particular rel- evance of institutions in countries with high levels of debt. Therefore, our findings support the necessary attention to the institutional tissue of societies since improvements in institutional quality can subsequently improve economic growth.

Do FDI and Patents Drive Sophistication of Exports? A Panel Data Approach

Seren Ozsoy, Burcu Fazlioglu, Sinan Esen

Prague Economic Papers 2021, 30(2):216-244 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.755

This paper investigates whether inflows of FDI and innovative activities act as a channel of knowledge spillovers in improving quality of countries' output. In measuring export quality, sophistication of a country's export basket is utilized. Utilizing panel data of countries for the period 2002-2015 and applying GMM methodology, the results indicate that the level of financial development, the quality of human capital and globalization of a country have a determinant role on the relation between knowledge spillover channels and the quality of exports. Patent applications generally positively affect sophistication of exports. FDI serves as a channel for knowledge spillovers to benefit the sophistication level of exports only for developed, more educated, financially developed and globalized countries.

Female Leadership and Firm Performance

Arlette Beltran

Prague Economic Papers 2019, 28(3):363-377 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.695

This study explores whether companies´ experience benefits when the firm's CEO and owner are both women. It employs data from the 2009-2014 World Bank Enterprise Surveys (WBES) to measure firms' performance through growth in sales and productivity. Potential endogeneity was corrected by using the UN Gender Development Index and the average fertility rate as they comply with the exclusion restrictions. The paper uses the Control Function method with a Probit first stage estimation and an OLS main equation. The findings suggest that a female owner strengthens the female CEO's business skills and leads to better firm performance than when the CEO is a woman and the owner is a man.

Testing Wagner's Law for Turkey: Evidence from a Trivariate Causality Analysis

Asuman Oktayer, Nagihan Oktayer

Prague Economic Papers 2013, 22(2):284-301 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.452

The purpose of this study is to analyse the relationship between government expenditure and economic growth in Turkey. The study tests the validity of Wagner's law by applying autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) cointegration technique using annual data over 1950-2010 period. In order to find out the possible impact of omitted variables, we first tested the standard bivariate versions of Wagner's law. In the next step by including a third variable - inflation ratio - the analysis extended on a trivariate system. The findings of each testing procedure indicate that omitted variables matter. Since, while there exists no long-run relationship between the variables in the first step of the testing procedure, a long-run correlation is found in the second step. The differences of this paper from the earlier studies testing the Law for Turkey are that, the causal link is examined within a trivariate framework and non-interest government expenditure is considered instead of total government expenditures.

Financial Distress and Access to Capital in Emerging Markets

Jorge Guillen

Prague Economic Papers 2010, 19(1):5-20 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.361

In this paper I study the main determinants of successful reaccess to international capital markets on a set of emerging market countries after a financial crisis. I focus on three components of the reaccess strategy: commitment to pay, ability to pay, and global liquidity. I employ a panel of 49 countries over a nearly 30-year period and apply a simple probit approach to show that, indeed, a sound external position and a sustainable debt profile, accompanied by a favorable global liquidity environment, are the key considerations for creditors considering whether to resume lending.