Working Paper: NBER ID: w28739
Authors: Wolfgang Keller
Abstract: This paper studies knowledge spillovers, positive externalities that augment the information set of an economic agent, and reviews the evidence on such spillovers in the context of international economic transactions. The entry discusses trade channels of knowledge transfer associated with purchases from abroad (imports) and sales to abroad (exports). Another focus is on the foreign direct investment (FDI) channel through purchases from abroad (inward FDI) and sales to abroad (outward FDI). The entry also distinguishes knowledge flows from foreign to domestic agents and from domestic to foreign agents. The entry underlines the importance of empirical methodology and data characteristics that determine the quality of econometric identification. Even though spillovers are by their very nature–as externalities–difficult to identify, over recent decades a number of advances have produced robust evidence that both trade and foreign direct investment lead to sizable knowledge spillovers. These advances have been both conceptual as well as in the areas of empirical methodology and new data.
Keywords: No keywords provided
JEL Codes: F1; F23; O3
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
Imports from high-R&D countries (O39) | Productivity levels in the importing country (F14) |
Trade liberalization in Chile (F19) | Productivity in import-competing industries (F14) |
Exporting activities (F10) | Learning externalities (D62) |
Starting to export (F10) | Productivity (O49) |