No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America:
The empirical literature on development has labelled as "middle-income trap" (MIT) the fact that many developing economies struggle to adjust to new sources of growth after reaching middle-income levels. For Latin America and the Caribbean, this is an especially challenging scenario, as on...
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Paris
OECD Publishing
2017
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Schriftenreihe: | OECD Development Centre Working Papers
no.340 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | The empirical literature on development has labelled as "middle-income trap" (MIT) the fact that many developing economies struggle to adjust to new sources of growth after reaching middle-income levels. For Latin America and the Caribbean, this is an especially challenging scenario, as only Chile, Trinidad and Tobago, and Uruguay have become high-income economies in the last six decades while several other LAC countries, already middle-income as early as 1950, stayed in that income range. This paper analyses empirically the main policy areas explaining the MIT, based on the experiences of 76 emerging economies and OECD countries, comparing those which evaded it and those which stayed there since the 1950s. Based on more than 200 000 estimations using a linear discriminant analysis, we identify institutional, social and economic features that help characterise policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap. Furthermore, using the Synthetic Control Method, we present for selected Latin American countries their main policy gaps according to their unique characteristics. |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (38 p.) |
DOI: | 10.1787/26b78724-en |
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spelling | Melguizo, Ángel VerfasserIn aut No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America Ángel, Melguizo ... [et al] Paris OECD Publishing 2017 1 Online-Ressource (38 p.) Text txt rdacontent Computermedien c rdamedia Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier OECD Development Centre Working Papers no.340 The empirical literature on development has labelled as "middle-income trap" (MIT) the fact that many developing economies struggle to adjust to new sources of growth after reaching middle-income levels. For Latin America and the Caribbean, this is an especially challenging scenario, as only Chile, Trinidad and Tobago, and Uruguay have become high-income economies in the last six decades while several other LAC countries, already middle-income as early as 1950, stayed in that income range. This paper analyses empirically the main policy areas explaining the MIT, based on the experiences of 76 emerging economies and OECD countries, comparing those which evaded it and those which stayed there since the 1950s. Based on more than 200 000 estimations using a linear discriminant analysis, we identify institutional, social and economic features that help characterise policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap. Furthermore, using the Synthetic Control Method, we present for selected Latin American countries their main policy gaps according to their unique characteristics. Development Nieto-Parra, Sebastián MitwirkendeR ctb Perea, José Ramón MitwirkendeR ctb Ariel Perez, Jaime MitwirkendeR ctb FWS01 ZDB-13-SOC FWS_PDA_SOC https://doi.org/10.1787/26b78724-en Volltext |
spellingShingle | Melguizo, Ángel No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America Development |
title | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America |
title_auth | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America |
title_exact_search | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America |
title_full | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America Ángel, Melguizo ... [et al] |
title_fullStr | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America Ángel, Melguizo ... [et al] |
title_full_unstemmed | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America Ángel, Melguizo ... [et al] |
title_short | No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle-income trap in Latin America |
title_sort | no sympathy for the devil policy priorities to overcome the middle income trap in latin america |
topic | Development |
topic_facet | Development |
url | https://doi.org/10.1787/26b78724-en |
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