Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth

Is there a ‘middle-income trap’? Theory suggests that the determinants of growth at low and high income levels may be different. If countries struggle to transition from growth strategies that are effective at low income levels to growth strategies that are effective at high income levels, they may stagnate at some middle-income level; this phenomenon can be thought of as a ‘middle-income trap.’ Defining income levels based on per capita gross domestic product relative to the United States, we do not find evidence for (unusual) stagnation at any particular middle-income level. However, we do find evidence that the determinants of growth at low and high income levels differ. These findings suggest a mixed conclusion: middle-income countries may need to change growth strategies in order to transition smoothly to high income growth strategies, but this can be done smoothly and does not imply the existence of a middle-income trap.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bulman, David, Eden, Maya, Nguyen, Ha
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Taylor and Francis 2017
Subjects:economic growth, cross-country convergence, middle-income trap, economic transition,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26012
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spelling dig-okr-10986260122024-08-19T16:07:50Z Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth Is There a Middle-Income Trap? Bulman, David Eden, Maya Nguyen, Ha economic growth cross-country convergence middle-income trap economic transition Is there a ‘middle-income trap’? Theory suggests that the determinants of growth at low and high income levels may be different. If countries struggle to transition from growth strategies that are effective at low income levels to growth strategies that are effective at high income levels, they may stagnate at some middle-income level; this phenomenon can be thought of as a ‘middle-income trap.’ Defining income levels based on per capita gross domestic product relative to the United States, we do not find evidence for (unusual) stagnation at any particular middle-income level. However, we do find evidence that the determinants of growth at low and high income levels differ. These findings suggest a mixed conclusion: middle-income countries may need to change growth strategies in order to transition smoothly to high income growth strategies, but this can be done smoothly and does not imply the existence of a middle-income trap. 2017-02-07T20:43:57Z 2017-02-07T20:43:57Z 2017 Journal Article Article de journal Artículo de revista Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy 1354-7860 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26012 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf Taylor and Francis
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
cross-country convergence
middle-income trap
economic transition
economic growth
cross-country convergence
middle-income trap
economic transition
spellingShingle economic growth
cross-country convergence
middle-income trap
economic transition
economic growth
cross-country convergence
middle-income trap
economic transition
Bulman, David
Eden, Maya
Nguyen, Ha
Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth
description Is there a ‘middle-income trap’? Theory suggests that the determinants of growth at low and high income levels may be different. If countries struggle to transition from growth strategies that are effective at low income levels to growth strategies that are effective at high income levels, they may stagnate at some middle-income level; this phenomenon can be thought of as a ‘middle-income trap.’ Defining income levels based on per capita gross domestic product relative to the United States, we do not find evidence for (unusual) stagnation at any particular middle-income level. However, we do find evidence that the determinants of growth at low and high income levels differ. These findings suggest a mixed conclusion: middle-income countries may need to change growth strategies in order to transition smoothly to high income growth strategies, but this can be done smoothly and does not imply the existence of a middle-income trap.
format Journal Article
topic_facet economic growth
cross-country convergence
middle-income trap
economic transition
author Bulman, David
Eden, Maya
Nguyen, Ha
author_facet Bulman, David
Eden, Maya
Nguyen, Ha
author_sort Bulman, David
title Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth
title_short Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth
title_full Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth
title_fullStr Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth
title_full_unstemmed Transitioning from Low-Income Growth to High-Income Growth
title_sort transitioning from low-income growth to high-income growth
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2017
url https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26012
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AT bulmandavid isthereamiddleincometrap
AT edenmaya isthereamiddleincometrap
AT nguyenha isthereamiddleincometrap
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