Spatial Dimensions of Trade Liberalization and Economic Convergence : Mexico 1985-2002

This article employs established techniques from the spatial economics literature to identify regional patterns of income and growth in Mexico and to examine how they have changed over the period spanned by trade liberalization and how they may be linked to the income divergence observed following liberalization. The article first shows that divergence has emerged in the form of several income clusters that only partially correspond to traditional geographic regions. Next, when regions are defined by spatial correlation in incomes, a south clearly exists, but the north seems to be restricted to the states directly on the United States (U.S.) border and there is no center region. Overall, the principal dynamic of both the increased spatial dependency and the increased divergence lies not on the border but in the sustained underperformance of the southern states, starting before the North American free-trade agreement, and to a lesser extent in the superior performance of an emerging convergence club in the north-center of the country.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aroca, Patricio, Bosch, Mariano, Maloney, William F.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank 2005-09-01
Subjects:AGRICULTURE, AVERAGE INCOME, AVERAGE INCOMES, AVERAGE PERFORMANCE, BETWEEN-GROUP INEQUALITY, CITIES, CONSOLIDATION, CONVERGENCE TEST, DEBT, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY, DIFFERENCES IN INCOME, ECONOMETRICS, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE, ECONOMIC POLICY, ECONOMIC REVIEW, ECONOMICS LITERATURE, EX POST, EXPLANATORY POWER, EXPORTS, EXTERNALITIES, FACTOR ENDOWMENTS, FOREIGN FIRMS, FREE TRADE, GDP, GDP PER CAPITA, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT PER CAPITA, GROUP INEQUALITY, GROWTH PROCESS, GROWTH RATES, HIGH GROWTH, HUMAN CAPITAL, INCOME, INCOME CONVERGENCE, INCOME DATA, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INCOME LEVEL, INCOME LEVELS, INCOME QUINTILES, INCREASING RETURNS, INEQUALITY, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, LABOR MARKET, LIMITED, LINEAR RELATIONSHIP, MEAN INCOME, NATIONAL INCOME, NATURAL ENDOWMENTS, NATURAL RESOURCES, NEGATIVE CORRELATION, NEGATIVE GROWTH, OIL PRODUCTION, PER CAPITA INCOME, PER CAPITA INCOMES, POLICY RESEARCH, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POLITICAL SCIENCE, POOR COUNTRIES, POPULATION GROWTH, POPULATION GROWTH RATES, REGIONAL DIFFERENCES, REGIONAL GROWTH, REGIONAL INEQUALITY, REGIONAL LEVEL, RELATIVE INCOME, RELATIVE INCOMES, RELATIVE POSITION, SERIES ECONOMETRICS, SPATIAL ECONOMICS, TRADE AGREEMENT, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, UNION, WAGES, WEALTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/09/17752999/spatial-dimensions-trade-liberalization-economic-convergence-mexico-1985-2002
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16432
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