Shooting Low or High: Do Countries Benefit from Entering Unrelated Activities?

Publication date

2018-01-16

Authors

Pinheiro, Flávio L.
Alshamsi, Aamena
Hartmann, Dominik
Boschma, RonISNI 0000000116353431
Hidalgo, César

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Document Type

Working paper
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Abstract

It is well known that countries tend to diversify their exports by entering products that are related to their current exports. Yet this average behavior is not representative of every diversification path. In this paper, we introduce a method to identify periods when countries enter relatively more unrelated products. We analyze the economic diversification paths of 93 countries between 1970 and 2010 and find that countries enter unrelated products in only about 7.2% of all observations. Then, we show that countries enter more unrelated products when they are at an intermediate level of economic development, and when they have higher levels of human capital. Finally, we ask whether countries entering more unrelated products grow faster than those entering only related products. The data shows that countries that enter more unrelated activities experience an increase in short-term economic growth of 0.5% per annum compared to those with similar levels of income, human capital, capital stock per worker, and economic complexity.

Keywords

relatedness, product space, unrelated diversification, economic complexity, catching up, new export products, economic growth, SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth

Citation

Pinheiro, F L, Alshamsi, A, Hartmann, D, Boschma, R & Hidalgo, C 2018 'Shooting Low or High : Do Countries Benefit from Entering Unrelated Activities?' Papers in Evolutionary Economic Geography, no. 07, vol. 18, arXiv, pp. 1-43. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.1801.05352