Examinando por Materia "crecimiento económico"
Mostrando 1 - 6 de 6
Resultados por página
Opciones de ordenación
Ítem América Latina y Asia del Este: una mirada al papel de los choques externos(Universidad EAFIT, 12/10/2010) Gutiérrez Bernal, Mariana; Yepes Bernal, Susana; Universidad EAFITÍtem Cambio técnico y política económica: la teoría y el caso colombiano (1950 - 2019)(Universidad EAFIT, 2020-11-12) Posada Posada, Carlos Esteban; Universidad EAFIT; cposad25@eafit.edu.co.The right policy to economic growth is based on the theory of a decentralized (market) society whose productive activity expands in the long term amid ups and downs thanks to technical change and the emergence, time and again, of various obstacles to economic growth. In the Colombian case of the last 70 years, the rates of economic growth and technical change have been associated with the inter-sectoral mobilization of productive resources, that is, to what is called “structural change”, and this, in turn, to economic policies (sometimes no so right)Ítem Ciclo económico de Colombia: una mirada desde la teoría austriaca (1994-2004)(Universidad EAFIT, 02/04/2007) Cano Gamboa, Carlos Andrés; Universidad EAFITÍtem Oracles in Pandemic: Forecasts of Colombian Economic Growth in 2020(Universidad EAFIT, 2021) Lozada González, Camilo Andrés; Perdomo Munévar, John Mauro; Torres Pinzón, Andrés FelipeÍtem South Korea’s lift-off to development: The role of Human Capital and Productivity in economic growth, 1960-1979(Universidad EAFIT, 2021-12-17) Quiero Aguirre, Francisco Javier; CUEBAll generators of the optimal algebra associated with a generalization of the Endem-Fowler equation are showed; some of them allow to give invariant solutions. Variational symmetries and the respective conservation laws are also showed. Finally, a representation of Lie symmetry algebra is showed by groups of matrices. South Korea is a case of impressive economic growth: a previously underdeveloped country that, after the 1960s, embarked on a process to achieve development before other underdeveloped countries. South Korea is also a case where innovation processes move from imitation to self-creation thanks to a quick updating or “catching up” process. South Korea’s journey from underdevelopment to development has sparked a rich and well-founded debate within economic theory. These debates weigh the roles of productive factors (Physical, Human, Social, and Financial Capital, Labor, resources, environment), economic agents (State, Firms, Banks), and international trade factors (FDI, Imports, Exports) on its growth process. The central argument of this article establishes that Capital is the central variable that explains the successful outcome of the Korean growth miracle. However, Capital composition is even more important. The impact of Human Capital on the growth process evinces a synergy with Knowledge development. We modify the Solow model using Human, Physical Capital, and Total Factor Productivity as independent variables in a Multivariable Regression Model for the period between 1960 and 1979 on Output per worker. We conclude that Human Capital and Productivity are just as important as Physical Capital for explaining growth per worker in South Korea due their synergistic properties. The study is restricted to the years prior to Park Chung-Hee’s rise to power and ends with his assassination.Ítem Tax incentives and investment expansion: evidence from Zimbabwe’s tourism industry(Universidad EAFIT, 2015-11-30) Munyanyi, Watson; Chiromba, Campion