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The Role of Productivity, Transportation Costs, and Barriers to Intersectoral Mobility in Structural Transformation

Cem Karayalcin and Mihaela Pintea

No 1413, Working Papers from Florida International University, Department of Economics

Abstract: The process of economic development is characterized by substantial reallocations of resources across sectors. In this paper, we construct a multi-sector model in which there are barriers to the movement of labor from low-productivity traditional agriculture to modern sectors. With the barrier in place, we show that improvements in productivity in modern sectors (including agriculture) or reductions in transportation costs may lead to a rise in agricultural employment and through terms-of-trade effects may harm subsistence farmers if the traditional subsistence sector is larger than a critical level. This suggests that policy advice based on the earlier literature needs to be revised. Reducing barriers to mobility (through reductions in the cost of skill acquisition and institutional changes) and improving the productivity of subsistence farmers needs to precede policies designed to increase the productivity of modern sectors or decrease transportation costs.

Pages: 22 pages
Date: 2014-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr
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https://economics.fiu.edu/research/pdfs/2014_working_papers/1413.pdf First version, 2014 (application/pdf)

Related works:
Journal Article: The role of productivity, transportation costs, and barriers to intersectoral mobility in structural transformation (2022) Downloads
Working Paper: The Role of Productivity, Transportation Costs, and Barriers to Intersectoral Mobility in Structural Transformation (2015) Downloads
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