Structural Change, Fundamentals, and Growth : A Framework and Case Studies

The volume consists of an overview and seven country studies, written by leading scholars from both developed and developing countries. The overview lays out a unifying framework for thinking about economic growth as a combination of two challenges. The “structural change challenge” is focused on moving resources from traditional low-productivity activities into modern, more productive industries. The “fundamentals challenge” faced by policy makers in the developing world is about how best to develop broad capabilities such as human capital and infrastructure. While the two are inextricably linked, they are conceptually different, and making this distinction is one of the contributions of this book. The overview also includes a description of the common methodology used in the country studies, a discussion of data and measurement issues, and a synthesis of the findings.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McMillan, Margaret S., Rodrik, Dani, Sepúlveda, Claudia
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute and the World Bank 2017-05-11
Subjects:ECONOMIC GROWTH, STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, TRADE POLICY, POLITICAL ECONOMIC, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, TRADE LIBERALIZATION, EDUCATION, HEALTH, INSTITUTIONS,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26528
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Summary:The volume consists of an overview and seven country studies, written by leading scholars from both developed and developing countries. The overview lays out a unifying framework for thinking about economic growth as a combination of two challenges. The “structural change challenge” is focused on moving resources from traditional low-productivity activities into modern, more productive industries. The “fundamentals challenge” faced by policy makers in the developing world is about how best to develop broad capabilities such as human capital and infrastructure. While the two are inextricably linked, they are conceptually different, and making this distinction is one of the contributions of this book. The overview also includes a description of the common methodology used in the country studies, a discussion of data and measurement issues, and a synthesis of the findings.