Supply and demand-driven spillovers and productivity growth

Japan and the World Economy - Tập 14 - Trang 285-304 - 2002
Catherine J Morrison Paul1
1Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA

Tài liệu tham khảo

Arnade, 1998, Capital adjustment in US agriculture and food processing: a cross-section model, Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics, 23, 85 Audretsch, 1996, R&D spillovers and the geography of innovation and production, American Economic Review, 86, 630 Ball, 1999, Patterns of state productivity growth in the US farm sector: linking state and aggregate models, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 81, 164, 10.2307/1244458 Bartlesman, 1994, Customer- and supplier-driven externalities, American Economic Review, 84, 1075 Bell, 2000, Applying the generalized-moments estimation approach to spatial problems involving microlevel data, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 82, 72, 10.1162/003465300558641 Berndt, E.R., 1991. The Practice of Econometrics. Addison-Wesley, Boston, MA. Bernstein, J.I., 1998. Factor intensities, rates of return and international R&D spillovers: the case of Canadian and US industries. Annales D’Economime Et De Statistique 49/50, 541–564. Bernstein, 1998, International R&D spillovers between US and Japanese R&D intensive sectors, Journal of International Economics, 44, 315, 10.1016/S0022-1996(97)00026-3 Bernstein, 1997, International R&D spillovers between Canadian and Japanese industries, Canadian Journal of Economics, 30, 276, 10.2307/136339 Branstetter, 2000, Vertical keiretsu and knowledge spillovers in Japanese manufacturing: an empirical assessment, Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, 14, 73, 10.1006/jjie.2000.0444 Branstetter, L., 2001. Are knowledge spillovers international or intranational in scope? Microeconometric evidence from Japan and the United States. Journal of International Economics, 53. Caplin, 1998, Miracle on sixth avenue: information externalities and search, The Economic Journal, 108, 60, 10.1111/1468-0297.00273 Capron, H., Cincera, M., 1998. Exploring the spillover impact on productivity of world-wide manufacturing firms, Annales D’Economie Et De Statistique, January–June, 565–587. Case, 1993, Journal of Public Economics, 52, 285, 10.1016/0047-2727(93)90036-S Chavas, 1997, An analysis of the source and nature of technical change: the case of US agriculture, Review of Economics and Statistics, 79, 482, 10.1162/003465300556896 Coe, 1995, International R&D spillovers, European Economic Review, 39, 859, 10.1016/0014-2921(94)00100-E David, 1990, Marshallian factor markets, externalities, and the dynamics of industrial localization, Journal of Urban Economics, 28, 349, 10.1016/0094-1190(90)90033-J Dekle, 1999, Agglomeration and land rents: evidence from the prefectures, Journal of Urban Economics, 46, 200, 10.1006/juec.1998.2118 Diao, 1999, Strategic policies and growth: an applied model of R&D-driven endogenous growth, Journal of Development Economics, 60, 343, 10.1016/S0304-3878(99)00044-9 Ellison, 1997, Geographic concentration in US manufacturing industries: a dartboard approach, Journal of Political Economy, 105, 889, 10.1086/262098 Eswaran, 1996, Demand externality and industrial productivity growth in LDCs, Journal of International Trade and Economic Development, 5, 1, 10.1080/09638199600000001 Goodwin, 1995, Structural change in factor demand relationships in the US food and kindred products industry, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 77, 69, 10.2307/1243890 Gopinath, 1996, Competitiveness of US food processing: benefits from primary agriculture, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 78, 1044, 10.2307/1243860 Hall, R.E., 1990. Invariance properties of Solow’s productivity residual. In: Diamond, P. (Ed.), Growth–Productivity–Employment: Essays to Celebrate Bob Solow’s Birthday. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 71–112. Head, 1995, Agglomeration benefits and location choice: evidence from Japanese manufacturing investments in the United States, Journal of International Economics, 38, 223, 10.1016/0022-1996(94)01351-R Heien, 1983, Productivity in US food processing and distribution, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 65, 297, 10.2307/1240877 Henderson, 1994, Managing innovation in the information age, Harvard Business Review, 72, 100 Irwin, 1994, Learning-by-doing spillovers in the semiconductor industry, Journal of Political Economy, 102, 1200, 10.1086/261968 Johnson, 1999, R&D spillovers to agriculture: measurement and application, Contemporary Economic Policy, 17, 432, 10.1111/j.1465-7287.1999.tb00695.x Ke, 1996, Embodied technological progress, technology-related producer inputs, and regional factors in a firm-level model of growth, Regional Science and Urban Economics, 26, 23, 10.1016/0166-0462(95)02108-6 Kelejian, 1999, A generalized moments estimator for the autoregressive parameter in a spatial model, International Economic Review, 40, 509, 10.1111/1468-2354.00027 Kiley, M.T., 1999. Computers and growth with costs of adjustment: will the future look like the past? Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Discussion Paper 99/36, July. Krugman, 1991, Increasing returns and economic geography, Journal of Political Economy, 99, 483, 10.1086/261763 Luh, 1991, Productivity growth in US agriculture under dynamic adjustment, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 73, 1116, 10.2307/1242440 Luh, 1993, Learning-by-doing and the sources of productivity growth: a dynamic model with application to US agriculture, Journal of Productivity Analysis, 4, 353, 10.1007/BF01073544 Macdonald, 1992, Productivity growth and the UK food system, 1954–1984, Journal of Agricultural Economics, 43, 191, 10.1111/j.1477-9552.1992.tb00214.x Moreno, 1997, Location and the growth of nations, Journal of Economic Growth, 2, 399, 10.1023/A:1009741426524 Morrison, 1997, Structural change, capital investment and productivity in the food processing industry, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 79, 110, 10.2307/1243947 Morrison, 1999, Scale economies and industry agglomeration externalities: a dynamic cost function approach, American Economic Review, 89, 272, 10.1257/aer.89.1.272 Paul, C.J.M., 1999. Cost Structure and the Measurement of Economic Performance. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, February. Paul, C.J.M., 2000a. Productivity and efficiency measurement for our ‘new economy’: issues and policy linkages. Forthcoming in the Journal of Productivity Analysis. Paul, C.J.M., 2000b. Modeling and measuring productivity in the agri-food sector: trends, causes, and effects. Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics, November. Paul, C.J.M., MacDonald, J.M., 2000. Tracing the Effects of Agricultural Commodity Prices on Food Processing Costs, Manuscript available at http://www.agecon.ucdavis.edu/facultypages/paul/paulpub.htm Paul, C.J.M., Eldon Ball, V., Felthoven, R.G., Grube, A., Nehring, R., 2001. Effective costs and chemicals use in US agricultural production: benefits and costs of using the environment as a free input. Forthcoming in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics. Sengupta, 1998, Economic fluctuations in a model of input and output growth in Japan (1965–1990), Economic Modelling, 15, 135, 10.1016/S0264-9993(96)01040-1 Smith, 1994, Agglomeration and industry location: an econometric analysis of Japanese-affiliated manufacturing establishments in automotive-related industries, Journal of Urban Economics, 36, 23, 10.1006/juec.1994.1024 Suzuki, 1993, R&D spillovers and technology transfer among and within vertical keiretsu groups: evidence from the Japanese electrical machinery industry, International Journal of Industrial Organization, 11, 573, 10.1016/0167-7187(93)90026-9 Weston, 1996, Growth strategies in the food industry, Business Economics, 31, 21 Zucker, L.G., Darby, M.R., 1998. Capturing technological opportunity via Japan’s star scientists: evidence from Japanese firms’ biotech patents and products. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper #6360, January.