Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners
The convergence of per capita gdp growth rates of less developed countries towards those of more industrialized economies is a central debate amongst growth economists. This study contributes to the literature by examining whether South Africa, as arguably Africa’s most developed economy, converges...
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University of Primorska
2020-03-01
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Series: | Managing Global Transitions |
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Online Access: | https://www.hippocampus.si/ISSN/1854-6935/18.25-44.pdf |
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doaj-5081ff3345ad4ef69917c0ca478cae9a2021-03-27T00:39:40ZengUniversity of PrimorskaManaging Global Transitions1854-69352020-03-01181254410.26493/1854-6935.18.25-44Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading PartnersNtombiyesibini Matonana0Andrew Phiri1Nelson Mandela UniversityNelson Mandela UniversityThe convergence of per capita gdp growth rates of less developed countries towards those of more industrialized economies is a central debate amongst growth economists. This study contributes to the literature by examining whether South Africa, as arguably Africa’s most developed economy, converges towards the growth of her main trading partners (i.e. Belgium, Botswana, China, Germany, India, Japan, Mozambique, Namibia, Netherlands, South Korea, United Arab Emirates (uae), United Kingdom (UK), United States (US), Zambia and Zimbabwe). To this end, we examine the integration properties of per capita GDP differences between South Africa and each of her trading partners and we particularly employ unit root testing procedures which are robust to ESTAR-type nonlinearities and unobserved smooth structural breaks. Our empirical evidence points to convergence between South Africa and Belgium, Botswana, China, Germany, India, Japan, Mozambique, Namibia, Netherlands, South Korea, the UAE, the UK and the US but not with Zambia and Zimbabwe.https://www.hippocampus.si/ISSN/1854-6935/18.25-44.pdfconvergenceflexible fourier form (fff) unit root testsunobserved structural breaksasymmetriessouth africa |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ntombiyesibini Matonana Andrew Phiri |
spellingShingle |
Ntombiyesibini Matonana Andrew Phiri Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners Managing Global Transitions convergence flexible fourier form (fff) unit root tests unobserved structural breaks asymmetries south africa |
author_facet |
Ntombiyesibini Matonana Andrew Phiri |
author_sort |
Ntombiyesibini Matonana |
title |
Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners |
title_short |
Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners |
title_full |
Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners |
title_fullStr |
Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners |
title_full_unstemmed |
Convergence Dynamics between South Africa and Her Main Trading Partners |
title_sort |
convergence dynamics between south africa and her main trading partners |
publisher |
University of Primorska |
series |
Managing Global Transitions |
issn |
1854-6935 |
publishDate |
2020-03-01 |
description |
The convergence of per capita gdp growth rates of less developed countries towards those of more industrialized economies is a central debate amongst growth economists. This study contributes to the literature by examining whether South Africa, as arguably Africa’s most developed economy, converges towards the growth of her main trading partners (i.e. Belgium, Botswana, China, Germany, India, Japan, Mozambique, Namibia, Netherlands, South Korea, United Arab Emirates (uae), United Kingdom (UK), United States (US), Zambia and Zimbabwe). To this end, we examine the integration properties of per capita GDP differences between South Africa and each of her trading partners and we particularly employ unit root testing procedures which are robust to ESTAR-type nonlinearities and unobserved smooth structural breaks. Our empirical evidence points to convergence between South Africa and Belgium, Botswana, China, Germany, India, Japan, Mozambique, Namibia, Netherlands, South Korea, the UAE, the UK and the US but not with Zambia and Zimbabwe. |
topic |
convergence flexible fourier form (fff) unit root tests unobserved structural breaks asymmetries south africa |
url |
https://www.hippocampus.si/ISSN/1854-6935/18.25-44.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ntombiyesibinimatonana convergencedynamicsbetweensouthafricaandhermaintradingpartners AT andrewphiri convergencedynamicsbetweensouthafricaandhermaintradingpartners |
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1724201488774856704 |