2025/05 | LEM Working Paper Series | ||||||||||||||||
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Trapped in bad specialization: premature deindustrialization and unstable growth in LACs |
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Maria Celeste Gomez, Giovanni Dosi, Federico Riccio and Maria Enrica Virgillito |
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Keywords | |||||||||||||||||
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Structural Change, sectoral composition, Latin America
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JEL Classifications | |||||||||||||||||
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F41, O11, O14, N16
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Abstract | |||||||||||||||||
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Over the last forty years, Latin American countries (LACs) have
experienced a variety of specialization trajectories, while sharing a
common pattern of weak and unstable growth. Given the accelerated
premature deindustrialization path and the loss of productive
capacity, manufacturing has represented a missed opportunity for
development. The result has been a stable landing into a middle-income
trap and economic stagnation. Accordingly, this paper addresses the
relationship between sectoral productive composition, growth
performance and its variability. Using the UN-COMTRADE and the Penn
World Table 10.1 databases between 1962 and 2017, we account for the
specialization strategies of LACs, linking aggregate output, export
products, and sectoral composition. In a nutshell, we examine the
extent to which revealed comparative advantages, at the country or the
technological (Pavitt) class level, and the relative composition of
the export baskets exert any significant role in explaining output
growth and volatility. According to our findings, specializing in
factor endowments and natural resources has brought LACs into a trap
of halted catching up.
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