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REGIONAL PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   143397


Environmental pollution emissions, regional productivity growth and ecological economic development in China / Chen, Shiyi   Article
Chen, Shiyi Article
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Summary/Abstract Environmental pollution emissions have become an extremely serious problem in China that makes its rapid economic growth unsustainable. This paper estimates the energy and emission adjusted total factor productivity (TFP) and reveals the ecological economic transition by province in the light of their contributions to output. The results indicate that China's ecological development fluctuated before 1992, then turned to improve, and peaked between 1999 and 2002. Due to the reappearance of heavy industrialization, China's ecological development process has reversed course since the beginning of this century.
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2
ID:   106230


Understanding openness and productivity growth in China: an empirical study of the Chinese provinces / Jiang, Yanqing   Journal Article
Jiang, Yanqing Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This paper investigates the effects of openness on China's regional productivity growth. We build a model of technology diffusion in which follower economies achieve productivity growth by taking advantage of technology spillovers from the world technology frontier. We hypothesize that China's regional productivity growth is a positive function of regional openness and a negative function of the current level of regional productivity. Empirical analysis in this paper focuses on how openness affects productivity growth in the Chinese provinces. We examine two effects of openness on regional productivity growth in China: the direct growth effect and the convergence effect. By using a variety of panel data regression techniques, we show that the direct growth effect of openness is the main effect while the convergence effect is insignificant. The findings of this paper lend strong support to the claim that the opening-up of China promotes the country's economic growth.
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