Growth Spillover Effects and Regional Development Patterns: The Case of Chinese Provinces

29 Pages Posted: 20 Jul 2005

Date Written: June 2005

Abstract

This paper discusses regional development patterns in China, and examines effective ways of using development aid to attain regional balanced growth through optimizing growth spillover effects.

Based on provincial panel data from 1978 to 99, the paper constructs an indicator "neighbor performance" to measure the geographic spillover effects of aggregate growth from and to different provinces according to their relative richness and geographic position. Analysis of a Solow-type growth model suggests that positive spillover effects dominate negative shadow effects at the national level as well as the regional level; and some coastal provinces provide growth pull and growth push forces for their neighbors and serve as locomotives.

The results show that the rapid take-off of the coastal provinces has the largest spillover effects on the entire Chinese economy, but at the expense of a widening regional gap. A policy of encouraging the growth of the non-coastal regional hubs would have strong forward and backward linkages with the inland/western regions and thus reduce the regional development gap without sacrificing much aggregate growth. The paper offers support for the policy of developing inland hubs, and argues that directing development aid to Hubei and Sichuan would optimize the growth spillover impacts on inland regions.

Keywords: Spillover effects, regional development pattern, balanced growth

JEL Classification: O18, O47, R11

Suggested Citation

Luo, Xubei, Growth Spillover Effects and Regional Development Patterns: The Case of Chinese Provinces (June 2005). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=757806

Xubei Luo (Contact Author)

World Bank ( email )

1818 H Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20433
United States

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