Trade Openness, Infrastructure, and the Wellbeing of Mexico's South

被引:5
|
作者
Gonzalez Rivas, Marcela [1 ]
机构
[1] Cornell Univ, Dept City & Reg Planning, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
来源
MEXICAN STUDIES-ESTUDIOS MEXICANOS | 2011年 / 27卷 / 02期
关键词
Mexico; Chiapas; Oaxaca; Guerrero; regional inequality; regional economic development; trade openness; infrastructure; industry development; transportation policy; agricultural policy; CONVERGENCE; INEQUALITY;
D O I
10.1525/msem.2011.27.2.407
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
This paper examines the effects of Mexican infrastructure and trade policy from 1940 to 2000 on the relative economic performance of its southern states of Chiapas, Guerrero, and Oaxaca. Building on the literature of economic geography, I develop an argument based on the importance of infrastructure in economic development, and discuss how the legacy of infrastructure policies that have excluded the south can explain both the south's overall performance and its particularly poor performance in the period of trade openness. Accessing international markets lowers the average costs of large infrastructure investments, thereby increasing the advantage of states that have received these investments. I support this argument by analyzing the industrial evolution of Mexican states, showing not only that states have predictably concentrated in infrastructure-intensive industries if they have such infrastructure (and vice versa), but also that those infrastructure-intensive industries have outperformed other industries in the period of trade openness.
引用
收藏
页码:407 / 429
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The structure and infrastructure of Mexico's science and technology
    Kostoff, RN
    del Río, JA
    Cortés, HD
    Smith, C
    Smith, A
    Wagner, C
    Leydesdorff, L
    Karypis, G
    Malpohl, G
    Tshiteya, R
    TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 2005, 72 (07) : 798 - 814
  • [32] Market Openness, Transition Economies and Subjective Wellbeing
    Ming-Chang Tsai
    Journal of Happiness Studies, 2009, 10 : 523 - 539
  • [33] Market Openness, Transition Economies and Subjective Wellbeing
    Tsai, Ming-Chang
    JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES, 2009, 10 (05) : 523 - 539
  • [34] Assessing the asymmetric impact of physical infrastructure and trade openness on ecological footprint: An empirical evidence from Pakistan
    Zahra, Samia
    Khan, Dilawar
    Gupta, Rakesh
    Popp, Jozsef
    Olah, Judit
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (05):
  • [35] Assessing the asymmetric impact of physical infrastructure and trade openness on ecological footprint: An empirical evidence from Pakistan
    Zahra, Samia
    Khan, Dilawar
    Gupta, Rakesh
    Popp, Jozsef
    Olah, Judit
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (07):
  • [36] North-South trade liberalization and returns to skill in the south: The case of Mexico
    Hazarika, Gautam
    Otero, Rafael
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, 2011, 20 (04): : 449 - 465
  • [37] Openness to trade in manufactures in the OECD
    Harrigan, J
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS, 1996, 40 (1-2) : 23 - 39
  • [38] Measuring Openness: VADE, Not Trade
    Larudee, Mehrene
    OXFORD DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2012, 40 (01) : 119 - 137
  • [39] Building communities and infrastructure to support openness
    Bowman, Sara
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2017, 253
  • [40] Trade openness and political distortions
    Grechyna, Daryna
    ECONOMICS & POLITICS, 2021, 33 (03) : 644 - 663