1. Economics focus: Development piecemeal.
- Subjects
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ECONOMIC development , *ECONOMIC policy , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *ECONOMIC reform , *POLICY analysis ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article offers policy suggestions for economic growth in developing countries. Over the past 15 years or so, economists have developed a long list of now-familiar remedies for developing countries hoping to grow their way to prosperity. This "Washington Consensus" includes the removal of trade protection and the introduction of deregulation, as well as fiscal and monetary discipline. Meanwhile, other economists have suggested that development depends not on specific policies but on "institutional" factors, such as a respect for property rights, which constrain the powers of the state. Two studies argue that institutional overhaul and broad economic reforms are not necessary to spur economic growth. In one of these papers, Edward Glaeser, a Harvard economist, and three co-authors question several prominent studies that treat institutions as a wellspring of development. Researchers at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government looked at 83 instances between 1957 and 1992 in which annual gross domestic product growth increased by at least two percentage points and the higher growth was sustained for at least eight years. These bursts of growth were not normally preceded by a big shift in policy, or by full-blown economic and political reforms--such as liberalisation or a move towards democracy. What struck the authors was the humble nature of the initial triggers of growth. These usually consist of nothing more than relaxing specific constraints on private activity.
- Published
- 2004