Determinants of structural heterogeneity in Mexican manufacturing industry, 1994-2008
2014-01-02T18:46:14Z
LC/G.2556-P
Includes bibliography
This article analyses the stagnation of productivity and the increasing structural heterogeneity of Mexican manufacturing industry in the period 1994-2008. Traditional indicators of dispersion are estimated for 200 activity classes, 50 branches and nine divisions of the manufacturing sector; and these corroborate the widening disparity in productive efficiency between globalized activities and traditional industries that has been reported in other papers. The study also provides a more detailed account of the intensification of this trend in the first decade of the present century and the specific characteristics of within-sector heterogeneity. Other results obtained using a shift-share technique show that structural change contributes very little to productivity growth, and that technological progress is concentrated in just a few activities that engage with the domestic economy in a variety of ways. Nonetheless, these activities have weak local linkages and add little value to the content of the goods they make.
Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL) - Biblioteca Hernán Santa Cruz
Héctor Aracena
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