Technological Asymmetries and Intensities in the Dialogue Between Post-Keynesianism and ECLAC Thought: Some Empirical Evidence
Abstract
The magnitude of technological asymmetries may be a determining factor for the uneven growth pattern among countries. As this is an important dimension of heterodox economic thinking in the context of the balance of payments constrained growth models, an investigation into the dynamics of the technological gap and the level of technological intensity observed between countries from the North and South is timely. This is the effort undertaken in this essay for the totality of Latin American and Caribbean countries. Based on a linear regression model for panel data, it was possible to observe that the temporal dynamics of the average level of technological intensity of the countries evaluated tend toward an equilibrium close to the intensity observed in countries such as Portugal and New Zealand. Despite this, the value found is far from countries at the top of the classification established by the Economic Complexity Index (ECI), indicating the need for public interventions to improve the productive capacities of each country over time.
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