Implicit reciprocity and growth in the international economy: A structuralist perspective

Vol. 32 No. 2 (2012)

Apr-Jun / 2012
Published April 1, 2012
PDF-Portuguese (Português (Brasil))
PDF-Portuguese (Português (Brasil))

How to Cite

Cimoli, Mario, Gabriel Porcile, and Guilherme Souza e Silva. 2012. “ Implicit Reciprocity and Growth in the International Economy: A Structuralist Perspective”. Brazilian Journal of Political Economy 32 (2):188-204. https://centrodeeconomiapolitica.org/repojs/index.php/journal/article/view/348.

Implicit reciprocity and growth in the international economy: A structuralist perspective

Mario Cimoli
Divisão de Desenvolvimento Produtivo e Empresarial, CEPAL – Nações Unidas e professor da Universidade de Veneza.
Gabriel Porcile
Division de Desarrollo Productivo y Empresarial, Departamento de Economia-UFPR.
Guilherme Souza e Silva
Mestre em Desenvolvimento Econômico pela Universidade Federal do Paraná (UFPR).
Brazilian Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 32 No. 2 (2012), Apr-Jun / 2012, Pages 188-204

Abstract

This paper discusses some of the structuralist ideas about international coordination and growth in an international system formed by countries whose productive structures and technological capabilities are strongly asymmetric. These ideas are formalized taking as a point of departure the Keynesian Balance-of-Payments constrained growth model with two countries. To this model is added a function (based on the catching up literature) in which the income elasticity of the demand for exports and imports depends on the technology gap. The model allows for discussing the inter-relations between the fiscal and the industrial and technological policies. It also allows for finding the rate of growth of autonomous expenditure in the periphery which ensures that it will use all the foreign exchange it earns in promoting economic growth (the principle of “automatic reciprocity”). 

JEL Classification: F41; F43; O54


Keywords: structuralist macroeconomics economic growth innovation and technologic diffusion