Do good institutions enhance the effect of technological spillovers on productivity? Comparative evidence from developed and transition economies
Do good institutions enhance the effect of technological spillovers on productivity? Comparative evidence from developed and transition economies
This paper argues that institutional quality has both direct and indirect (moderating) effects on productivity of countries. These hypotheses are tested using a battery of institutional proxies (governance, economic freedom, intellectual property rights and ease of doing business) and two channels for technological spillovers (trade and FDI) in a panel of developed and transition economies. The results confirm that good institutions have positive and comparable direct effects on productivity across the board. However, they moderate differently the relationship between foreign technological spillovers and productivity. Thus, governance, IPR and economic freedom exhibit negative moderation in the case of transition economies, while easiness of doing business moderates positively this relationship for both groups of countries. Further, the moderation effects are larger for transition economies and for trade-related spillovers. Overall, these results suggest a trade-off for transition countries between pursuing institutional upgrades and enjoying greater gains from technological spillovers.
133-154
Krammer, Marius
24ce872e-5044-4846-bb35-88e12c74c854
26 September 2015
Krammer, Marius
24ce872e-5044-4846-bb35-88e12c74c854
Krammer, Marius
(2015)
Do good institutions enhance the effect of technological spillovers on productivity? Comparative evidence from developed and transition economies.
Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 94, .
(doi:10.1016/j.techfore.2014.09.002).
Abstract
This paper argues that institutional quality has both direct and indirect (moderating) effects on productivity of countries. These hypotheses are tested using a battery of institutional proxies (governance, economic freedom, intellectual property rights and ease of doing business) and two channels for technological spillovers (trade and FDI) in a panel of developed and transition economies. The results confirm that good institutions have positive and comparable direct effects on productivity across the board. However, they moderate differently the relationship between foreign technological spillovers and productivity. Thus, governance, IPR and economic freedom exhibit negative moderation in the case of transition economies, while easiness of doing business moderates positively this relationship for both groups of countries. Further, the moderation effects are larger for transition economies and for trade-related spillovers. Overall, these results suggest a trade-off for transition countries between pursuing institutional upgrades and enjoying greater gains from technological spillovers.
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Accepted/In Press date: 4 September 2014
Published date: 26 September 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 497818
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497818
PURE UUID: 019f5745-c52f-4edd-baa3-e67ac07a91db
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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2025 18:21
Last modified: 01 Feb 2025 03:19
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Marius Krammer
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