Education and the evolution of comparative advantage
College
School of Economics
Document Type
Article
Source Title
Structural Change and Economic Dynamics
Volume
70
First Page
530
Last Page
543
Publication Date
2024
Abstract
We analyze the evolution of comparative advantage in 1,240 products from 49 low- and middle-income countries between 1995 and 2015. We show that countries with high education levels were more successful in developing comparative advantage in products unrelated to those they already exported. This effect is strongest for non-core products. In contrast, these countries did not develop comparative advantage in products that were intrinsically complex or education-intensive. These results are robust to corrections for specification errors, for institutional, infrastructure, and FDI-related factors, for regional specialization patterns, for key shifts in global trade rules, and for each economy’s degree of industrial dynamism prior to 1995. These findings suggest that the key role of education when seeking to develop new industries is to help a country learn to manage unfamiliar challenges, and so overcome path dependence.
html
Recommended Citation
Felipe, J., Jin, H., & Mehta, A. (2024). Education and the evolution of comparative advantage. Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, 70, 530-543. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/14195
Disciplines
Development Studies | Education
Keywords
Business and education; Education—Economic aspects
Upload File
wf_no