Karakoç, Ulaş
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Name Variants
Karakoç, Ulaş
Ulaş KARAKOÇ
Karakoc, Ulas
K., Ulas
K.,Ulas
ULAŞ KARAKOÇ
Ulas, Karakoc
K., Ulaş
KARAKOÇ, ULAŞ
Karakoç U.
U. Karakoç
KARAKOÇ, Ulaş
Karakoc,U.
Ulaş Karakoç
Karakoç,U.
Karakoç, ULAŞ
Karakoc,Ulas
Karakoç, U.
Ulaş KARAKOÇ
Karakoc, Ulas
K., Ulas
K.,Ulas
ULAŞ KARAKOÇ
Ulas, Karakoc
K., Ulaş
KARAKOÇ, ULAŞ
Karakoç U.
U. Karakoç
KARAKOÇ, Ulaş
Karakoc,U.
Ulaş Karakoç
Karakoç,U.
Karakoç, ULAŞ
Karakoc,Ulas
Karakoç, U.
Job Title
Dr. Öğr. Üyesi
Email Address
ulas.karakoc@khas.edu.tr
ORCID ID
Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
Google Scholar ID
WoS Researcher ID
Scholarly Output
3
Articles
3
Citation Count
9
Supervised Theses
0
3 results
Scholarly Output Search Results
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Article Citation Count: 7Regional inequalities and the West-East divide in Turkey since 1913(Wiley, 2023) Karakoç, Ulaş; Karakoc, Ulas; Pamuk, SevketThis paper examines the evolution of regional disparities within the present-day borders of Turkey since 1913. Based on our estimates for 58 provinces, we find beta-convergence, an inverse U, and more recently, the beginnings of an N-shaped pattern for value added per capita. We also find that regional disparities in Turkey exhibit a number of special features that do not easily fit the well-studied pattern of the early industrializers. First, while per capita value added in other regions moved towards country averages, the differences between the East and the rest of the country persisted and even increased until recently. Second, spatial distribution of economic activity became more concentrated over time due to continued migration to the megacity of Istanbul. Third, we find that regional disparities in per capita value added in Turkey and other developing countries have been higher than those experienced by the early industrializers. These findings raise questions about the extent to which the regional disparities experiences of Turkey and other developing countries have been different than those of the early industrializers.Article Citation Count: 0A reassessment of industrial growth in interwar Turkey through first-generation sectoral estimates(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2023) Karakoç, UlaşThis study presents the first sectorally disaggregated estimates of the industrial output growth for Turkey between World War I and II. These estimates indicate that at the aggregate level the existing official index overestimates the output growth. Secondly, the sectoral disaggregation shows that the industrial growth was balanced, as both textiles and food-processing branches, which comprised most of the value-added, grew significantly. Local industries expanded against the only modest gains in per capita consumption of manufactured goods and incomes. Output growth was positively correlated with higher initial import penetration and nominal protection rates, which implies that trade protectionism helped favorable relative prices induce domestic expansion. On the other hand, both import-competing and domestic-market-oriented sectors significantly expanded, which suggests that import repression and increasing domestic demand drove industrial growth.Article Citation Count: 2Overcoming the Egyptian cotton crisis in the interwar period: the role of irrigation, drainage, new seeds, and access to credit(Blackwell Publishing, 2021) Karakoç, Ulaş; Karakoç, UlaşAfter experiencing a period of spectacular growth during the late nineteenth century, the Egyptian cotton sector underwent a phase of stagnation, which was followed by a gradual and steady increase in output during the interwar period. Drawing on a new panel dataset at the province–year level, this article explores the determinants of the upturn in cotton output, running a horserace between credit, seed technology, and infrastructure. In order to address endogeneity concerns, an instrumental variable approach is adopted, using a modified version of Bartik's shift-share instrumental variable. Our results provide supporting evidence that peasants switched to a lower-yielding cotton variety as a response to changes in relative price. Moreover, our production function estimates show that two key factors had a positive impact on output growth: credit availability and the adoption of new cotton varieties.