Why Do Regions Differ in Growth? The Productivity of the Eurozone and Its Contribution to the Added Value of Its European Neighbors
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Value-added growth Productivity European Monetary Union Convergence Spatial spillovers
Date
2022-09-07Referencia bibliográfica
Mihi-Ramirez, A.; Melchor-Ferrer, E.; Garcia-Rodriguez, Y. Why Do Regions Differ in Growth? The Productivity of the Eurozone and Its Contribution to the Added Value of Its European Neighbors. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11215. [https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811215]
Patrocinador
SEJ-609Résumé
Despite the fact that the European integration process has intensified cooperation among
European partners, the significant impact on growth represented by the recent lengthy periods
of productivity stagnation in European countries still remains unexplained, as are the growing
disparities among the more advanced countries of the integrated economy. This paper focuses on
long-term economic growth based on productivity and its components, as well as on the effects of
integration of EMU and non-EMU member states. The use of spatial econometric models allows
us to incorporate the interactions among European countries into growth models. In line with
neoclassical growth models, our results contribute to explaining how the growth of a eurozone
country is related to the economic growth of its neighbors. Moreover, we confirm the relevance
of eurozone countries’ interactions in times of crisis (2009–2018), as European countries generate
spatial spillover effects that link their economic cycles. Although capital stock (i.e., investment) has a
positive effect on the eurozone’s growth, its slowdown cannot compensate for the effect of declining
labor-force participation, which is proven to be a crucial factor for growth. Likewise, immigration
flows affect economic growth, but this differs according to the workers’ level of education.