Poverty traps in a frictionless world: The effects of learning and technology assimilation
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2011
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Elsevier
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López, S. M., Molero, J., & Santos-Arteaga, F. J. (2011). Poverty traps in a frictionless world: The effects of learning and technology assimilation. Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 22(2), 106-115. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.STRUECO.2010.12.001
Abstract
We study an endogenous growth model of technology assimilation through an adaptive
learning process defining the accumulation of technological knowledge among both workers and industrial clusters. The assimilation of new technology and the arrival rate of
innovations are both based on the distance from the technological frontier to the current
technological development level of the country. We illustrate how, even if technological
innovations become immediately available to all countries, and absent educational and
institutional frictions among countries, differences in technological development levels
allow for the existence of poverty traps leading to the economic stagnation of technological
laggards.