Author/Authors :
Zaman, Khalid Department of Economics - University of Wah - Quaid Avenue - Wah Cantt - Pakistan , Ur Rashid Khan, Haroon School of Finance - College of Business and Public Management - Kean University - NJ - USA - Wenzhou-Kean University Campus - Wenzhou - PR China , Ahmad, Mehboob Department of Management Sciences - Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology (SZABIST) - Islamabad Campus - Pakistan , Aamir, Alamzeb Department of Management Sciences - FATA University - F.R. Kohat - Pakistan
Abstract :
The relationship between research productivity and economic growth is the subject of information science which deals in this study to examine the impact of number of publications, research & development (R&D) expenditures and researchers involved in R&D activities on economic growth in the World’s largest regions for the period of 1980–2011. The study further expanded the research-growth nexus in the context of top twenty nations in terms of research output for the field of science and social sciences. The results confirmed the long-run relationship between research output and economic growth; while there is bidirectional causality between real economic growth and number of publication, in United States, Italy, Spain, Australia, India, Netherlands, Brazil, Switzerland, Taiwan, and Poland. Similarly, there is two-way causal relationship between real economic growth and R&D expenditures in USA, China, UK, Japan, India, Switzerland, Taiwan, Sweden, and Turkey. Finally, there is evident of feedback hypothesis between real economic growth and researchers involved in R&D activities in the USA, UK, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. The direction of causality is crucial because it has significantly policy implications for economic development.
Keywords :
Research Output , Economic Growth , Time Series Analysis , Granger Causality , World’s Region