Change Font: A A A A Contact Us What's New FAQs Subscribe ADB.org home
HomePublicationsForeign Ownership, Technological Capabilities, and Clothing Exports in Sri LankaReferences

References

Asian Development Bank and World Bank. 2005. Sri Lanka: Improving the Rural and Urban Investment Climate. Manila: Asian Development Bank and Washington DC: World Bank.

Athukorala, P. and S. Rajapathirana. 2000. Liberalization and Industrial Transformation: Sri Lanka in International Perspective. New Delhi: Oxford University Press.

Bell, M. and K. Pavitt. 1993. Technological Accumulation and Industrial Growth: Contrasts Between Developed and Developing Countries. Industrial and Corporate Change 2: 2.

Bhaduri, S. and A. Ray. 2004. Exporting Through Technological Capability: Econometric Evidence from India’s Pharmaceutical and Electrical/Electronics Firms. Oxford Development Studies 32 (1): 87–100.

Central Bank of Sri Lanka (various). Annual Report. Colombo: Central Bank of Sri Lanka.

Chandrasiri, S. 2003. Technological Issues in Small and Medium Enterprises in Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka Economics Journal 4 (1): 59–96.

Deardorff, A. 2005. How Robust is Comparative Advantage. Review of International Economics 13: 1004–1016.

Deraniyagala, S. 2001. The Impact of Technology Accumulation on Technical Efficiency: An Analysis of the Sri Lankan Clothing and Agricultural Machinery Industries. Oxford Development Studies 29 (1): 101–114.

Deraniyagala, S., and H. Semboja. 1999. Trade Liberalization, Firm Performance and Technology Upgrading in Tanzania. In The Technological Response to Import Liberalization in Sub-Saharan Africa, edited by S. Lall. Basingstoke (UK): Macmillan Press.

Dunning, J. H. 1993. Multinational Enterprises and the Global Economy. Wokingham (UK): Addison-Wesley Publishing Company.

Ernst, D., T. Ganiatsos, and L. Mytelka, eds. 1998. Technological Capabilities and Export Success in Asia. London: Routledge.

Foreign Investment Advisory Service (FIAS). 1993. A New Investment Promotion Strategy for Sri Lanka. Washington, DC: FIAS, International Finance Corporation.

Ganeshamoorthy, M. 2002. The Political Economy of Trade Liberalization in Developing Countries: The Sri Lankan Case. Nijmegen Studies in Development and Cultural Change Vol. 41. Saarbrücken, Germany: Verlag für Entwicklungspolitik Saarbrücken.

Greene, W. 2000. Econometric Analysis. Fourth Edition. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.

Kelegama, S., and F. Foley. 1999. Impediments to Promoting Backward Linkages from the Garment Industry in Sri Lanka. World Development 27 (8): 1445– 1460.

Knutsen, H. M. 2004. Industrial Development in Buyer-Driven Networks: The Garment Industry in Vietnam and Sri Lanka. Journal of Economic Geography 4: 545–564.

Kumar, N., and N. S. Siddharthan. 1994. Technology, Firm Size and Export Behaviour in Developing Countries: The Case of Indian Enterprises. Journal of Development Studies 31 (2): 289–309.

Lakshman, W. D. 1989. Lineages of Dependent Development: from State Control to the Open Economy in Sri Lanka. In The Challenge in South Asia, edited by P. Wignaraja and A. Hussain. New Delhi: Sage Press.

Lall, S. 1986. Technological Development and Export Performance in LDCs: Leading Engineering and Chemical Firms in India. Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv 122 (1) 80–91.

———. 1987. Learning to Industrialize: India’s Acquisition of Technological Capability. Basingstoke (UK): Macmillan Press.

———. 1992. Technological Capabilities and Industrialization. World Development 20: 165–86.

Lall, S., and G. Wignaraja. 1995. Building Export Capabilities in Textiles and Clothing: Case Studies of German and Italian Companies’ Exports. In Beyond the Multifibre Agreement: Third World Competition and Restructuring Europe's Textile Industry, edited by G. B. Navaretti, R. Faini, and A. Silberston. Paris: OECD.

Levy, B. 1993. Obstacles to Developing Indigenous Small and Medium Enterprises: An Empirical Assessment. The World Bank Economic Review 7 (1): 65–83.

Maddala, G. S. 1983. Limited-dependent and Qualitative Variables in Econometrics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Pietrobelli, C. 1997. Industry, Competitiveness and Technological Capabilities in Chile: A New Tiger from Latin America. London: Macmillan.

Rasiah, R. 2003. Foreign Ownership, Technology and Electronics Exports from Malaysia and Thailand. Journal of Asian Economics 14: 785–811.

———. 2004. Foreign Firms, Technological Intensities and Economic Performance: Evidence from Africa, Asia and Latin America. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.

———. 2006. Ownership, Technological Intensities and Economic Performance in South Africa. International Journal of Technology Management 36 (1/2/3): 166–189.

Romijn, H. 1999. Acquisition of Technological Capability in Small Firms in Developing Countries. Basingstoke (UK): Macmillan Press.

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). 2004. Investment Policy Review: Sri Lanka. Geneva: UNCTAD.

Wakelin, K. 1997. Trade and Innovation: Theory and Evidence. Cheltenham (UK): Edward Elgar.

Westphal, L. E., K. Kritayakirana, K. Petchsuwan, H. Sutabutr, and Y. Yuthavong. 1990. The Development of Technological Capability in Manufacturing: A Macroscopic Approach to Policy Research. In Science and Technology: Lessons for Development Policy, edited by R. E. Evenson and G. Ranis. London: Intermediate Technology Publications.

Wignaraja, G. 1994. Trade and Industrial Policies and Experience in Sri Lanka. In Trade Policy and Industrialisation in Turbulent Times, edited by G. K. Helleiner. London: Routledge.

———. 1998. Trade Liberalization in Sri Lanka: Exports, Technology and Industrial Policy. London: Macmillan Press and New York: St. Martins Press.

———. 2002. Firm Size, Technological Capabilities and Market-Oriented Policies in Mauritius. Oxford Development Studies 30 (1): 87–104.

Wignaraja, G., and G. Ikiara. 1999. Adjustment, Technological Capabilities, and Enterprise Dynamics in Kenya. In Opening Up, and Shutting Down? Import Liberalisation and Industrial Technology in Sub-Saharan Africa, edited by S. Lall. Basingstoke (UK): Macmillan Press.

Wilmore, L. 1992. Transnationals and Foreign Trade: Evidence from Brazil. Journal of Development Studies 28 (2): 314–335.

World Bank. 1994. Private Sector Assessment of Sri Lanka. Washington, DC: World Bank.

Download this Discussion Paper [ PDF 248KB| 18 pages ].




[previous chapter] [next chapter]


Post a Comment

We welcome your feedback on this publication. Post a comment. ADBI is not obliged to acknowledge or publish comments and may abridge or edit them before web posting.

Comment(s)

There are [0] comment(s) for this entry. Post a comment.

    The views expressed in this paper are the views of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Asian Development Bank Institute (ADBI), the Asian Development Bank (ADB), its Board of Directors, or the governments they represent. ADBI does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this paper and accepts no responsibility for any consequences of their use. Terminology used may not necessarily be consistent with ADB official terms.

    Back to Top 
    © 2012 Asian Development Bank Institute.