posted on 2017-07-04, 09:01authored byMahyudin Ahmad, Stephen G. Hall
This paper extends the existing studies on institutions-growth nexus in two ways: firstly, it estimates a
growth model that is spatially augmented to capture the countries’ dependence, and secondly it
measures the countries’ dependence using a newly proposed concept called institutional proximity, in
addition to the commonly used geography. Spatial Durbin model, that includes not only spatially lagged
dependent variable but also spatially lagged explanatory variables, is shown to be the most appropriate
to describe the panel dataset used in this study, which comprises of observations from 58 developing
countries for year 1984-2007. The results find that institutions, specifically the property rights
institutions, matter for growth in developing countries. The results also find an evidence of indirect
institutional spillovers where institutions in a country lead to growth improvement in the country and
subsequently generate positive spillover effects on neighbors’ economic growth. The results also yield
robust support to the concept of augmented convergence process as a result of neighboring effects and
its speed is relatively higher than the conventional β-convergence of a standard growth model. The
greater convergence speed is consistent across a number of spatial models using both geographical and
institutional proximity measures. The paper finally concludes with several policy implications for
developing countries as far as the effects of institutional proximity and spillovers on growth and
convergence are concerned.
Funding
The corresponding author gratefully acknowledges the funding from the Ministry of Higher Education,
Malaysia for his academic visit to University of Cambridge, United Kingdom (08/2015-07/2017).
History
Citation
Journal of Policy Modeling, 2017
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Economics
The file associated with this record is under embargo until 24 months after publication, in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. The full text may be available through the publisher links provided above.;JEL code: C21, O43, R10