Agricultural Growth and Inter‐Sectoral Linkages in a Developing Economy

Does growth in the manufacturing sector of an economy spillover to agriculture, or do sectors share similar growth rates only when they share some common exogenous stimuli? The limited number of investigations of this issue, for cross‐sections of countries, have found some evidence in favour of spillovers, though the methodologies used cannot readily separate correlation from causation. Adapting the Feder (1982) model of sectoral externalities to a time‐series context, we examine how far agricultural output in Malaysia has been affected by inter‐sectoral spillovers. Our results suggest that expansion of manufacturing output, though associated with reduced agricultural output in the short‐run, is associated with agricultural expansion over the long‐run. Service output growth on the other hand seems to have been inimical to agricultural growth in both the short‐ and long‐runs, while causality testing supports the case for spillovers rather than “common causes”. Evidence on sectoral productivity is consistent with neoclassical arguments suggesting that the benefits of higher productivity in manufacturing tend to spill over to agriculture, encouraging productivity convergence.

[1]  Steven c. Blank THE CHALLENGE TO THINK BIG AS AMERICAN AGRICULTURE SHRINKS , 2001 .

[2]  A. Milne,et al.  The Relevance of P-Star Analysis to UK Monetary Policy , 1994 .

[3]  R. Mosconi,et al.  NON-CAUSALITY IN COINTEGRATED SYSTEMS: REPRESENTATION ESTIMATION AND TESTING , 1992 .

[4]  S. Johansen Testing Weak Exogeneity and the Order of Cointegration in UK Money Demand Data , 1992 .

[5]  J. Bhagwati Splintering and Disembodiment of Services and Developing Nations , 1984 .

[6]  Hans-Eggert Reimers,et al.  Comparisons of tests for multivariate cointegration , 1992 .

[7]  C. Granger Investigating Causal Relations by Econometric Models and Cross-Spectral Methods , 1969 .

[8]  W. Lewis Economic Development with Unlimited Supplies of Labour , 1954 .

[9]  Xavier Irz,et al.  Is agriculture the engine of growth , 2006 .

[10]  Gershon Feder On exports and economic growth , 1983 .

[11]  S. Dowrick Sectoral change, catching up and slowing down: OECD post-war economic growth revisited , 1989 .

[12]  K. Lai,et al.  FINITE-SAMPLE SIZES OF JOHANSEN'S LIKELIHOOD RATIO TESTS FOR COINTEGRATION , 2009 .

[13]  Kiminori Matsuyama,et al.  Agricultural Productivity, Comparative Advantage and Economic Growth , 1991 .

[14]  Mary Tiffen,et al.  Transition in Sub-Saharan Africa: Agriculture, Urbanization and Income Growth , 2003 .

[15]  Norman Gemmell,et al.  Economic development and structural change: The role of the service sector , 1982 .

[16]  S. Johansen STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF COINTEGRATION VECTORS , 1988 .

[17]  P. Romer Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth , 1986, Journal of Political Economy.

[18]  Norman Gemmell,et al.  Industrialisation, Catching Up and Economic Growth: A Comparative Study across the World's Capitalist Economies , 1991 .

[19]  Michael Osterwald-Lenum A Note with Quantiles of the Asymptotic Distribution of the Maximum Likelihood Cointegration Rank Test Statistics , 1992 .