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Assessing The Double-Edged Sword Of Using Imitation As A Stepping Stone To Innovation: A Case Of Malaysia’S K-Economy Puzzle

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  • KING YOONG LIM

    (Department of Economics, Lancaster University Management School, Bailrigg, Lancaster LA1 4YX, UK)

Abstract

Policy prescription for middle-income economies struggling to achieve innovation-driven growth has often been rapid promotion of skills-driven industrial transformation. However, Malaysia, an upper middle-income economy aspiring to achieve innovation-led growth, presents a near decade of K-Economy Growth Puzzle in the 2000s, when its aggressive skills-driven transformation initiatives had somehow resulted in decline to a lower output growth path despite successful expansion in skilled labor and innovation production. We present a continuous time growth model with industrial transformation based on an existing model advocating rapid skills transformation. By solving the model as a two-point boundary value problem, coupled with country-specific calibration strategies, vastly different results are obtained for this middle-income economy with fixed, imitation-heavy production structure. There may be a double-edged sword to using imitation as stepping stone to innovation, which then requires a much different industrial transformation approach. By examining transformation with different labor market configurations in a stylized manner using numerical experiments, we find that a delicate reordering of labor incentives would have been enough to help Malaysia navigating through the output growth–skills transformation trade-off.

Suggested Citation

  • King Yoong Lim, 2020. "Assessing The Double-Edged Sword Of Using Imitation As A Stepping Stone To Innovation: A Case Of Malaysia’S K-Economy Puzzle," The Singapore Economic Review (SER), World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte. Ltd., vol. 65(01), pages 131-159, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:wsi:serxxx:v:65:y:2020:i:01:n:s0217590817460018
    DOI: 10.1142/S0217590817460018
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