International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy
The paper presents the results of examinations of linear and nonlinear causalities performed for international trade involving the Polish economy and its economic growth. In order to infer the impact of the world crisis on the Polish economy, two samples have been studied (containing quarterly data)...
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Wrocław University of Science and Technology
2010-01-01
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Series: | Operations Research and Decisions |
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doaj-a5ccb7bfc8c34addbf94c34351e740bb2020-11-24T23:29:02ZengWrocław University of Science and TechnologyOperations Research and Decisions2081-88582391-60602010-01-01vol. 20no. 3-4529171189851International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish EconomyHenryk Gurgul0Łukasz Lach1University of Science and Technology, Cracow, PolandUniversity of Science and Technology, Cracow, PolandThe paper presents the results of examinations of linear and nonlinear causalities performed for international trade involving the Polish economy and its economic growth. In order to infer the impact of the world crisis on the Polish economy, two samples have been studied (containing quarterly data) – a full sample (Q1 1996–Q3 2009) and pre-crisis sample (Q1 1996–Q3 2008). The results of linear causality tests support the existence of feedback between the growth rate of exports and growth in gross domestic product (GDP) irrespectively of the time period chosen. For both the samples examined, no direct causal links between the growth rates of GDP and imports were detected. One can only suppose the existence of indirect links before the crisis. Bidirectional causality was found for growth rates of exports and imports only for the pre-crisis sample. Some weak evidence of a causal link running from the growth rate of imports to the growth rate of exports was also found for the period that covers the crisis, which may be interpreted as a confirmation of the fact that growth in imports also precedes growth in exports in bullish periods. It results from our computations that, at the time of the financial crisis of 2008, the main factor that caused Polish GDP growth to remain positive was domestic demand. The results of nonlinear causality analysis provided only weak evidence for causality running from GDP to exports, from GDP to imports and from imports to exports. (original abstract)http://orduser.pwr.wroc.pl/DownloadFile.aspx?aid=166 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Henryk Gurgul Łukasz Lach |
spellingShingle |
Henryk Gurgul Łukasz Lach International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy Operations Research and Decisions |
author_facet |
Henryk Gurgul Łukasz Lach |
author_sort |
Henryk Gurgul |
title |
International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy |
title_short |
International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy |
title_full |
International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy |
title_fullStr |
International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy |
title_full_unstemmed |
International Trade and Economic Growth in the Polish Economy |
title_sort |
international trade and economic growth in the polish economy |
publisher |
Wrocław University of Science and Technology |
series |
Operations Research and Decisions |
issn |
2081-8858 2391-6060 |
publishDate |
2010-01-01 |
description |
The paper presents the results of examinations of linear and nonlinear causalities performed for international trade involving the Polish economy and its economic growth. In order to infer the impact of the world crisis on the Polish economy, two samples have been studied (containing quarterly data) – a full sample (Q1 1996–Q3 2009) and pre-crisis sample (Q1 1996–Q3 2008). The results of linear causality tests support the existence of feedback between the growth rate of exports and growth in gross domestic product (GDP) irrespectively of the time period chosen. For both the samples examined, no direct causal links between the growth rates of GDP and imports were detected. One can only suppose the existence of indirect links before the crisis. Bidirectional causality was found for growth rates of exports and imports only for the pre-crisis sample. Some weak evidence of a causal link running from the growth rate of imports to the growth rate of exports was also found for the period that covers the crisis, which may be interpreted as a confirmation of the fact that growth in imports also precedes growth in exports in bullish periods. It results from our computations that, at the time of the financial crisis of 2008, the main factor that caused Polish GDP growth to remain positive was domestic demand. The results of nonlinear causality analysis provided only weak evidence for causality running from GDP to exports, from GDP to imports and from imports to exports. (original abstract) |
url |
http://orduser.pwr.wroc.pl/DownloadFile.aspx?aid=166 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT henrykgurgul internationaltradeandeconomicgrowthinthepolisheconomy AT łukaszlach internationaltradeandeconomicgrowthinthepolisheconomy |
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