On the predictability of knowledge formation: The tortuous link between regional specialization, trade, and development
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Publication:698240
DOI10.1007/BF01257923zbMATH Open1010.91070MaRDI QIDQ698240FDOQ698240
Authors: Lucas Bretschger
Publication date: 18 September 2002
Published in: Journal of Economics (Search for Journal in Brave)
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Cites Work
Cited In (11)
- Human capital, technology, and specialization: A comparison of developed and developing countries
- Entry costs and regional productivity disparity in an open economy
- The implications of Rybczynski's theorem for government spending, learning by doing, and labor mobility
- The study on the mechanism of knowledge complexity on industrial structure upgrading
- Patterns of technology, industry concentration, and productivity growth without scale effects
- Regional spillovers, economic growth, and the effects of economic integration
- Is the `globalization' of science always good for scientific productivity and economic growth?
- A micro-level analysis of regional economic activity through a PCA approach
- The correlation of productivity growth across regions and industries in the United States
- Beyond distance: the spatial relationships of European regional economic growth
- Economic complexity and growth: can value-added exports better explain the link?
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