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Reflections on Catch-Up: The Spread of Catch-Up and the Middle-Income Trap
| Content Provider | Semantic Scholar |
|---|---|
| Author | Shin, Jang-Sup |
| Copyright Year | 2014 |
| Abstract | Reflections on Catch-up: The Spread of Catch-up and the Middle-Income TrapNayer, Deepak (2013). Catch Up Developing Countries in the World Economy, Oxford University Press.Lee. Keun (2013). Schumpetrian Analysis of Economic Catch-up Knowledge, Path-Creation, and the Middle-Income Trap, Cambridge University Press.If the twentieth century was the American century, then the twentyfirst century Is for emerging market economies. The twentieth century began with the 'forge-ahead' of the United States. According to Maddison (1991), the income gap between the US and other advanced countries continued to widen, with the average income of the latter reduced from approximately 60% to 50% of that of the former during the first half of the twentieth century. During the second half of the twentieth century, certain countries, Including Western European countries, Japan, and the 'East Aslan tigers' successfully advanced. However, the catch-up remained a local phenomenon rather than a global one. applicable only to a small number of countries. The overall income gap between advanced countries and emerging market economies remained the same, and the US maintained its economic hegemony during the period (World Bank 2003; Shin 1996).However, the twenty-first century started with a strong catch-up by emerging market economies. The two most populous economies in the world, namely, China and India, are advancing rapidly and continuously. If they continue the current pace of the catch-up, China will soon replace the US as the number one economy in the world (in terms of size, but not in terms of per capita income), and India will also grow larger than the US by the middle of this century. Other emerging market countries from Southeast Asia. Latin America, and Africa are also staging their catch-up with advanced countries.As a result, "the rise of the middle class in emerging markets" has already become a new phenomenon that global companies cannot ignore in the conduct of their businesses (Mahbubani 2013).The books of Deepak Nayer and Keun Lee are timely and they address this important historical change in the world economy. While Nayer paints a long-term and broad historical picture of the catch-up phenomenon, Lee focuses on the detailed processes of catch-up and draws policy implications for catch-up economies.The book of Nayer reads more like Maddison's (1991; 2007) comprehensive presentation of macro aspects on the dynamics of the world economy than Kennedy's (1989) sweeping narrative on the historical movement of the world. Nayer begins with "an untold story" of longterm "falling behind" of the current emerging market economies during the period from 1820 to 1950, which occurred largely because of the imperial aggression of the West and the colonial submission of the East (Chapter 1). The book then explained the catch-up phenomenon afterwards by dividing the period into two sub-periods, from 1950 to 1980 when the catch-up of developing countries began its long march and from the 1980s to 2010 when their catch-up gathered "further momentum" (Chapter 2).Nayer is different from Maddison because he included international migration as an important aspect of the long-term progression of the world economy. Unlike Madison who was only concerned with the growthrelated macro figures, Nayer also explored issues on inequality and poverty. The inclusions seem to have both pros and cons. By including broader issues, the book draws the attention of the readers to those issues that were often neglected in the catch-up debate. However, he did not clarify the questions, such as the role of these issues in the catch-up or how they influenced the outcome, how they can be understood in relation with other macro variables, and so on. The result was a decrease in clarity in the explanation of the catch-up phenomenon.By contrast. Lee narrows the scope to technological aspects of catchup and discusses what he refers to as "the middle-income trap. … |
| Starting Page | 387 |
| Ending Page | 390 |
| Page Count | 4 |
| File Format | PDF HTM / HTML |
| Volume Number | 27 |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | http://s-space.snu.ac.kr/bitstream/10371/93018/1/06_Review%20of%20Books.pdf |
| Language | English |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |