Title of article
Does Chinaʹs trade expansion help African development? — an empirical estimation
Author/Authors
He، نويسنده , , Yong، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
11
From page
28
To page
38
Abstract
This paper uses Comtrade panel data to assess the impacts of imports from China, in comparison with those from the United States and France, on Sub-Saharan African manufactured exports (as proxies of production performance). It is found that Chinese impacts are significantly positive in all sectors and in general Chinese impacts are stronger than those of the United States and France. A South–South trade theoretical framework is then explored to interpret this finding: When the absorptive capability of a poorly-developed country is quite limited and (or) a sizeable substitution effect of importing intermediate goods on this countryʹs local production is present, it is better to import from a Southern country with a superior technology than from a Northern country with a very advanced technology. Therefore, my finding has provided evidence that Chinaʹs increasing trade with Africa is helpful to African economic development.
Keywords
Intermediate goods effect , Impact of Chinese exports on Africa , Technology spillovers , Substitution effect , South–South trade model
Journal title
China Economic Review (Amsterdam
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
China Economic Review (Amsterdam
Record number
2262762
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