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Structural Change and Economic Growth in India—A State-Wise Analysis

Kshamanidhi Adabar () and Trupti Mayee Sahoo ()
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Kshamanidhi Adabar: Central University of Gujarat
Trupti Mayee Sahoo: Central University of Gujarat

Chapter Chapter 10 in Current Issues in the Economy and Finance of India, 2018, pp 153-170 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract This paper reviews the recent literature on structural changeStructural change , human capitalHuman Capital and economic growthEconomic growth and examines the relationship between structural changeStructural change and economic growthEconomic growth across 14 major Indian states from 1993–94 to 2011–12. Calculating incomeIncome share for various economic activities and following in the line with Dietrich for NAV and MLI, McMillan and Rodrik for within and static effects, Timmer et al. for within effect, static and dynamic effects, it estimates structural changeStructural change in incomeIncome for 14 major states from 1993–94 to 2011–12. There has been an increasing trend in patterns of structural changeStructural change as evident by NAV and MLI across sectors to contribute to the growth process of per capita real incomeIncome . Using catch up regression for absolute convergenceConvergence , it finds the evidence of absolute beta divergence meaning by relatively richer states have grown faster than poorer counterparts. Including structural changeStructural change in incomeIncome and employment in industrial sector (high intensity) along with other control variables such as per capita investment, human capitalHuman Capital , initial level of per capita real incomeIncome in cross-sectional regressions, it finds significant contribution of structural changeStructural change for economic growthEconomic growth across Indian states during this period. However, some of the fundamental variables are although in expected line, they are not significant which calls for re-examination of these issues within suitable framework such as dynamic panel data analysis that will sort out some of the problems encountered in cross-sectional growth regression.

Keywords: Structural change; Economic growth; Human capital; Convergence (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2018
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:prbchp:978-3-319-99555-7_10

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-99555-7_10

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