Industrialization and the Big Push

93 Pages Posted: 3 Jan 2025

See all articles by Jaedo Choi

Jaedo Choi

Federal Reserve Board of Governors

Younghun Shim

International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Abstract

We study how one-time subsidies for adoption of modern technology drove Korea's industrialization in the 1970s. Leveraging unique historical data, we provide causal evidence consistent with coordination failures: adoption improved adopters' performance and generated local spillovers, with firms more likely to adopt when other local firms had already adopted. We incorporate these findings into a quantitative model, where the potential for multiple steady states depends on parameters mapped to the causal estimates. In our calibrated model, Korea's one-time subsidies shifted its economy to a more industrialized steady state, increasing heavy manufacturing's GDP share by 8.6% and export intensity by 16.2%. Larger market access amplifies the effects of these subsidies, as the gains from adoption increase with firms' scale.

Keywords: Big push, Industrialization, Coordination failure, Complementarity, Local spillover, Market access

JEL Classification: O14, O25, R11

Suggested Citation

Choi, Jaedo and Shim, Younghun, Industrialization and the Big Push. IMF Working Paper No. 2024/259, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5080181 or http://dx.doi.org/10.5089/9798400295638.001

Jaedo Choi (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Board of Governors ( email )

Washington, D.C., DC

Younghun Shim

International Monetary Fund (IMF) ( email )

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