Thirlwall’s Law, Investment, Productive Chains and Domestic Markets

Juan Alberto Vázquez Muñoz

Resumen


The aim of this paper is to apply the extended Thirlwall’s Law, which incorporate the capital accumulation, to explain the Chinese (1971 – 2022) and Mexican (1961 – 2022) growth rates. We use the ARDL cointegration methodology to estimate their import demand functions. We get robust estimations and then we calculate their long-run growth rates, which result very close to their actual values. We recommend changing the Mexican industrialization strategy to generate domestic productive chains and domestic industries that produce import substitute goods to dynamize the domestic market. One limit of our paper is that we use aggregate variables, but it could be necessary to analyze the effects of exports and capital accumulation in the specific domestic industry subsectors. The originality lies in showing that the Chinese dynamism during the last decades is more related to its dynamic capital accumulation than to its dynamic exports growth rate, whereas the Mexican slow growth rate regime is more related to its low capital accumulation than to its high exports growth rate. 


Palabras clave


Econometric Modeling, Integration, Developing Countries, Industrialization, Growth Theory

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.21919/remef.v19i3.999

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