Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development

This paper provides an historical overview of both the evolution of the economic performance of the developing world and the evolution of economic thought on development policy. The twentieth century was broadly characterized by divergence between high-income countries and the developing world, with only a limited number (less than 10% of the economies in the world) managing to progress out of lower or middle-income status to high-income status. The last decade witnessed a sharp reversal from a pattern of divergence to convergence – particularly for a set of large middle-income countries. The latter phenomenon was also driven by increasing economic ties among developing countries and, on the intellectual scale, increased knowledge generation and sharing among the developing countries. Re-thinking development policy implies confronting these realities: twentieth century economic divergence, the experience of the handful of success stories, and the recent rise of the multi-polar growth world. This paper provides descriptive data and a literature survey to document these trends.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lin, Justin Yifu, Rosenblatt, David
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Taylor and Francis 2012-07-30
Subjects:economic growth, development, convergence, structural transformation,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13361
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spelling dig-okr-10986133612021-04-23T14:03:08Z Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development Lin, Justin Yifu Rosenblatt, David economic growth development convergence structural transformation This paper provides an historical overview of both the evolution of the economic performance of the developing world and the evolution of economic thought on development policy. The twentieth century was broadly characterized by divergence between high-income countries and the developing world, with only a limited number (less than 10% of the economies in the world) managing to progress out of lower or middle-income status to high-income status. The last decade witnessed a sharp reversal from a pattern of divergence to convergence – particularly for a set of large middle-income countries. The latter phenomenon was also driven by increasing economic ties among developing countries and, on the intellectual scale, increased knowledge generation and sharing among the developing countries. Re-thinking development policy implies confronting these realities: twentieth century economic divergence, the experience of the handful of success stories, and the recent rise of the multi-polar growth world. This paper provides descriptive data and a literature survey to document these trends. 2013-05-10T17:18:51Z 2013-05-10T17:18:51Z 2012-07-30 Journal Article Journal of Economic Policy Reform 1748-7870 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13361 en_US Journal of Economic Policy Reform;15(3) CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic economic growth
development
convergence
structural transformation
economic growth
development
convergence
structural transformation
spellingShingle economic growth
development
convergence
structural transformation
economic growth
development
convergence
structural transformation
Lin, Justin Yifu
Rosenblatt, David
Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development
description This paper provides an historical overview of both the evolution of the economic performance of the developing world and the evolution of economic thought on development policy. The twentieth century was broadly characterized by divergence between high-income countries and the developing world, with only a limited number (less than 10% of the economies in the world) managing to progress out of lower or middle-income status to high-income status. The last decade witnessed a sharp reversal from a pattern of divergence to convergence – particularly for a set of large middle-income countries. The latter phenomenon was also driven by increasing economic ties among developing countries and, on the intellectual scale, increased knowledge generation and sharing among the developing countries. Re-thinking development policy implies confronting these realities: twentieth century economic divergence, the experience of the handful of success stories, and the recent rise of the multi-polar growth world. This paper provides descriptive data and a literature survey to document these trends.
format Journal Article
topic_facet economic growth
development
convergence
structural transformation
author Lin, Justin Yifu
Rosenblatt, David
author_facet Lin, Justin Yifu
Rosenblatt, David
author_sort Lin, Justin Yifu
title Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development
title_short Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development
title_full Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development
title_fullStr Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development
title_full_unstemmed Shifting Patterns of Economic Growth and Rethinking Development
title_sort shifting patterns of economic growth and rethinking development
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2012-07-30
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13361
work_keys_str_mv AT linjustinyifu shiftingpatternsofeconomicgrowthandrethinkingdevelopment
AT rosenblattdavid shiftingpatternsofeconomicgrowthandrethinkingdevelopment
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