Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries
Critics of export promotion policies have pointed out a fallacy of composition, where what is viable for a small country acting in isolation might not be viable when pursued by a group of countries simultaneously. This paper investigates the crowding-out effect of the fallacy of composition; that is...
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my.iium.irep.4342014-09-22T02:44:34Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/434/ Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries Mat Ghani, Gairuzazmi HB3711 Business cycles. Economic fluctuations Critics of export promotion policies have pointed out a fallacy of composition, where what is viable for a small country acting in isolation might not be viable when pursued by a group of countries simultaneously. This paper investigates the crowding-out effect of the fallacy of composition; that is, whether developing countries that specialize in exports of manufactured products compete and crowd out one another's exports. The results of fixed-effects panel estimation suggest that developing countries are not crowding out one another's exports. Instead, they are crowding out Western European countries' exports of manufactured products. Blackwell 2006-09 Article REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/434/1/Export_Promotion_Policies.pdf Mat Ghani, Gairuzazmi (2006) Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries. Asian Economic Journal, 20 (3). pp. 319-331. ISSN 1467-8381 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/asej.2006.20.issue-3/issuetoc |
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HB3711 Business cycles. Economic fluctuations Mat Ghani, Gairuzazmi Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
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Critics of export promotion policies have pointed out a fallacy of composition, where what is viable for a small country acting in isolation might not be viable when pursued by a group of countries simultaneously. This paper investigates the crowding-out effect of the fallacy of composition; that is, whether developing countries that specialize in exports of manufactured products compete and crowd out one another's exports. The results of fixed-effects panel estimation suggest that developing countries are not crowding out one another's exports. Instead, they are crowding out Western European countries' exports of manufactured products. |
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Article |
author |
Mat Ghani, Gairuzazmi |
author_facet |
Mat Ghani, Gairuzazmi |
author_sort |
Mat Ghani, Gairuzazmi |
title |
Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
title_short |
Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
title_full |
Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
title_fullStr |
Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
title_full_unstemmed |
Export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
title_sort |
export promotion policies and the crowding-out effect in developing countries |
publisher |
Blackwell |
publishDate |
2006 |
url |
http://irep.iium.edu.my/434/1/Export_Promotion_Policies.pdf http://irep.iium.edu.my/434/ http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/asej.2006.20.issue-3/issuetoc |
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1643604612835442688 |
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13.211869 |