Does research output cause economic growth or vice versa? Evidence from 34 OECD countries

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Authors

Ntuli, Hamilton
Inglesi-Lotz, Roula
Chang, Tsangyao
Pouris, Anastassios

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Volume Title

Publisher

Association for Information Science and Technology

Abstract

The causal relation between research and economic growth is of particular importance for political support of science and technology as well as for academic purposes. This paper revisits the causal relationship between research papers published and economic growth in OECD countries for the period 1981-2011, using bootstrap panel causality analysis, which accounts for cross-section dependency and heterogeneity across countries. Our empirical results support unidirectional causality running from research output (in terms of total number of papers published) to economic growth for the US, Finland, Hungary, and Mexico; the opposite causality from economic growth to research papers published for Canada, France, Italy, New Zealand, UK, Austria, Israel, and Poland; and no causality for the rest of the countries. Our findings provide important policy implications for research policies and strategies for OECD countries.

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Keywords

Research, Economic growth, Political support, Science and technology, Academic purposes, National productivity, Scholarly publishing, Econometrics, Countries and regions, International aspects

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Citation

Ntuli, H, Inglesi-Lotz, R, Chang, TY & Pouris, A 2015, 'Does research output cause economic growth or vice versa? Evidence from 34 OECD countries', Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, vol. 66, no. 8, pp. 1709-1716.