The World Bank recently made a prescription for an ideal sustained growth; notes the Economist (highlight mine)...
“SINCE 1950 13 countries have grown at an average rate of 7% a year, or more, for 25 years or longer. Were these exceptional “economic miracles”, or models for others to follow? On Wednesday May 21st a new study on the subject, “The Growth Report: Strategies for Sustained Growth and Inclusive Development”, was published by a body of thinkers and policymakers brought together by the World Bank (one of our
1. FULL EXPLOITATION of the world economy (importing bright ideas and technology; producing exports that others want);
2. MACROECONOMIC STABILITY;
3. HIGH RATES of saving and investment;
4. letting the MARKET ALLOCATE RESOURCES; and
5. COMMITTED, CREDIBLE, CAPABLE governments.
courtesy of the World Bank
The 13 economies as listed by the World Bank…
courtesy of the Economist
The common characteristics of these high growth countries, to quote the World Bank,
``The high-growth countries benefited in two ways. One, they imported ideas, technology, and knowhow from the rest of the world. Two, they exploited global demand, which provided a deep, elastic market for their goods. The inflow of knowledge dramatically increased the economy’s productive potential; the global market provided the demand necessary to fulfill it. To put it very simply, they imported what the rest of the world knew, and exported what it wanted.”
In short, governance committed to the Market Economy which benefits from a global division of labor buttressed by exchanges of ideas, technology and optimum resource allocation as dictated by the market forces.
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