CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5

One of the core elements of the neoclassical growth theory is that poor countries have low capital labor ratios but have higher marginal products of capital than the rich countries. This means the low income countries experience faster growth rates and become a reason for allowing capital, goods, an...

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Main Authors: Ni Putu Wiwin Setyari, Surya Dewi Rustariyuni, Luh Putu Aswitari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2016-09-01
Series:Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.ugm.ac.id/jieb/article/view/23268
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spelling doaj-e9af54a3f53245bcba176b3ca3c67fa32021-06-02T02:31:44ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaJournal of Indonesian Economy and Business2085-82722338-58472016-09-0131326027810.22146/jieb.23268CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5Ni Putu Wiwin Setyari0Surya Dewi Rustariyuni1Luh Putu Aswitari2Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Udayana, IndonesiaFaculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Udayana, IndonesiaFaculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Udayana, IndonesiaOne of the core elements of the neoclassical growth theory is that poor countries have low capital labor ratios but have higher marginal products of capital than the rich countries. This means the low income countries experience faster growth rates and become a reason for allowing capital, goods, and technology can move across countries. Assuming that the labor intensive countries have higher returns on capital, then investment will flows into those countries and encourage higher economic growth. However, in fact capital flows seems to go in the opposite direction. A country with abundant capital can expand its capital-intensive sectors and export their goods along with trade liberalization. Consequently, the returns to capital in its capital-intensive sectors rise and a greater demand for investment induces higher capital inflows from abroad. Those predictions push developing countries to change their labor intensive industrial structures and become more capital intensive, to encourage their economic growth. This paper examines how capital intensity and openness affect economic growth using data from the ASEAN 5 countries data. The issue of endogeneity and unobserved heterogeneity, as major problems in a data panel, are addressed by the fixed effect method and the Feasible General Least Square (FGLS). Capital flows appears to be the most important source of economic growth, whilst trade is found to have a limited role. The interaction between capital intensity and the openness indicator do not indicate significant effects. Generally, there is no evidence that the more outward-oriented countries with high levels of capital intensity experiences higher economic growth.https://journal.ugm.ac.id/jieb/article/view/23268foreign direct investmenteconomic growth of open economiescapital intensity of industrial structure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ni Putu Wiwin Setyari
Surya Dewi Rustariyuni
Luh Putu Aswitari
spellingShingle Ni Putu Wiwin Setyari
Surya Dewi Rustariyuni
Luh Putu Aswitari
CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5
Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
foreign direct investment
economic growth of open economies
capital intensity of industrial structure
author_facet Ni Putu Wiwin Setyari
Surya Dewi Rustariyuni
Luh Putu Aswitari
author_sort Ni Putu Wiwin Setyari
title CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5
title_short CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5
title_full CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5
title_fullStr CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5
title_full_unstemmed CAPITAL INTENSITY, OPENNESS, AND THE ECONOMIC GROWTH OF THE ASEAN 5
title_sort capital intensity, openness, and the economic growth of the asean 5
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Journal of Indonesian Economy and Business
issn 2085-8272
2338-5847
publishDate 2016-09-01
description One of the core elements of the neoclassical growth theory is that poor countries have low capital labor ratios but have higher marginal products of capital than the rich countries. This means the low income countries experience faster growth rates and become a reason for allowing capital, goods, and technology can move across countries. Assuming that the labor intensive countries have higher returns on capital, then investment will flows into those countries and encourage higher economic growth. However, in fact capital flows seems to go in the opposite direction. A country with abundant capital can expand its capital-intensive sectors and export their goods along with trade liberalization. Consequently, the returns to capital in its capital-intensive sectors rise and a greater demand for investment induces higher capital inflows from abroad. Those predictions push developing countries to change their labor intensive industrial structures and become more capital intensive, to encourage their economic growth. This paper examines how capital intensity and openness affect economic growth using data from the ASEAN 5 countries data. The issue of endogeneity and unobserved heterogeneity, as major problems in a data panel, are addressed by the fixed effect method and the Feasible General Least Square (FGLS). Capital flows appears to be the most important source of economic growth, whilst trade is found to have a limited role. The interaction between capital intensity and the openness indicator do not indicate significant effects. Generally, there is no evidence that the more outward-oriented countries with high levels of capital intensity experiences higher economic growth.
topic foreign direct investment
economic growth of open economies
capital intensity of industrial structure
url https://journal.ugm.ac.id/jieb/article/view/23268
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