Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America

This paper discusses the causes of the middle-income trap in Latin America and the Caribbean, identifies the challenges and opportunities for Latin America that come from China's rise, and draws lessons from New Structural Economics and the Gr...

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Main Authors: Lin, Justin Yifu, Treichel, Volker
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
GDP
GNP
TAX
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/08/16593868/learning-chinas-rise-escape-middle-income-trap-new-structural-economics-approach-latin-america
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12013
id okr-10986-12013
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTING
ADVANCED COUNTRIES
ADVANCED COUNTRY
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
AFFILIATES
AGRICULTURE
BANK OF KOREA
BANKING CRISES
BANKING SUPERVISION
BANKING SYSTEM
BANKS
BASE YEAR
BENCHMARKS
BINDING CONSTRAINTS
BUDGET DEFICITS
BUSINESS CYCLES
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
CAPITAL INTENSITY
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
COMMODITY EXPORTS
COMMODITY PRICES
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVE MARKET
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMERS
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
CREDIT POLICIES
CURRENCY
DEBT
DEBT CRISES
DEBT CRISIS
DEMOGRAPHIC
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
DEVELOPMENT BANKS
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DIMINISHING RETURNS
DISPOSABLE INCOME
DIVIDENDS
DYNAMIC ECONOMIES
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC HISTORY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ECONOMIC POWERHOUSE
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC REFORMS
ECONOMIC STRUCTURE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKET
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKETS
ENERGY RESOURCES
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORT BASE
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORTS
EXPOSURE
EXTERNALITY
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
FINANCIAL CRISES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL SECTORS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FINANCIAL SYSTEMS
FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
FISCAL DEFICIT
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE
FORECASTS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN FIRMS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN TRADE
FUTURE GROWTH
GDP
GDP DEFLATOR
GDP PER CAPITA
GLOBAL ECONOMIC LANDSCAPE
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL EXPORTS
GLOBAL MARKET
GLOBAL OUTPUT
GLOBAL RISK
GLOBALIZATION
GNP
GOVERNMENT DEBT
GOVERNMENT INTERVENTIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH OF MULTINATIONAL
GROWTH POTENTIAL
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GROWTH THEORY
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME INEQUALITY
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFLATION
INFLATION TARGETING
INFLATIONARY FINANCING
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE REQUIREMENTS
INTANGIBLE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT DECISION
INVESTMENT POLICY
JOINT VENTURES
LABOR COSTS
LAWS
LEGISLATION
LIBERALIZATION
LIVING STANDARDS
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
MACROECONOMIC VULNERABILITIES
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MARGINAL COST
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET FAILURES
MARKET PARTICIPANTS
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SHARES
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY
MIGRATION
MONETARY POLICY
MONOPOLY
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEOCLASSICAL MODELS
NET EXPORTS
NEW MARKETS
NONPERFORMING LOANS
OUTPUT
OUTPUTS
PER CAPITA INCOME
PER CAPITA INCOMES
POLITICAL POWER
POWER PARITY
PRIVATE CAPITAL
PRIVATE CAPITAL FLOWS
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCT MARKETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROTECTIONISM
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
PURCHASING POWER
RAPID GROWTH
RATE OF RETURN
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
RETURN ON INVESTMENT
SAVINGS
SAVINGS RATES
SCARCE CAPITAL
SEIGNIORAGE
SOCIAL CAPITAL
SOCIAL PROTECTION
STABILIZATION POLICIES
STATE ENTERPRISES
STRUCTURAL CHANGE
SURPLUS LABOR
TARIFF BARRIERS
TAX
TAX COLLECTION
TAX SYSTEM
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRANSACTION
TRANSACTION COSTS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNFAIR COMPETITION
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WEALTH
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
WORLD ECONOMIES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD MARKETS
WORLD TRADE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
ADVANCED COUNTRIES
ADVANCED COUNTRY
ADVANCED ECONOMIES
AFFILIATES
AGRICULTURE
BANK OF KOREA
BANKING CRISES
BANKING SUPERVISION
BANKING SYSTEM
BANKS
BASE YEAR
BENCHMARKS
BINDING CONSTRAINTS
BUDGET DEFICITS
BUSINESS CYCLES
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL FLOWS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
CAPITAL INTENSITY
COMMERCIAL BANK
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
COMMODITY EXPORTS
COMMODITY PRICES
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVE MARKET
COMPETITIVENESS
CONSUMERS
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
CREDIT POLICIES
CURRENCY
DEBT
DEBT CRISES
DEBT CRISIS
DEMOGRAPHIC
DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
DEVELOPMENT BANKS
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DIMINISHING RETURNS
DISPOSABLE INCOME
DIVIDENDS
DYNAMIC ECONOMIES
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC HISTORY
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ECONOMIC POWERHOUSE
ECONOMIC REFORM
ECONOMIC REFORMS
ECONOMIC STRUCTURE
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EMERGING ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKET
EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES
EMERGING MARKETS
ENERGY RESOURCES
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORT BASE
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORTS
EXPOSURE
EXTERNALITY
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
FINANCIAL CRISES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FINANCIAL MARKETS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL SECTORS
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FINANCIAL SYSTEMS
FISCAL CONSOLIDATION
FISCAL DEFICIT
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE
FORECASTS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN FIRMS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN TRADE
FUTURE GROWTH
GDP
GDP DEFLATOR
GDP PER CAPITA
GLOBAL ECONOMIC LANDSCAPE
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL EXPORTS
GLOBAL MARKET
GLOBAL OUTPUT
GLOBAL RISK
GLOBALIZATION
GNP
GOVERNMENT DEBT
GOVERNMENT INTERVENTIONS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH OF MULTINATIONAL
GROWTH POTENTIAL
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GROWTH THEORY
HUMAN CAPITAL
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME GROWTH
INCOME INEQUALITY
INDIVIDUAL FIRMS
INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFLATION
INFLATION TARGETING
INFLATIONARY FINANCING
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE REQUIREMENTS
INTANGIBLE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT DECISION
INVESTMENT POLICY
JOINT VENTURES
LABOR COSTS
LAWS
LEGISLATION
LIBERALIZATION
LIVING STANDARDS
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION
MACROECONOMIC VULNERABILITIES
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MARGINAL COST
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET FAILURES
MARKET PARTICIPANTS
MARKET SHARE
MARKET SHARES
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY
MIGRATION
MONETARY POLICY
MONOPOLY
MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEOCLASSICAL MODELS
NET EXPORTS
NEW MARKETS
NONPERFORMING LOANS
OUTPUT
OUTPUTS
PER CAPITA INCOME
PER CAPITA INCOMES
POLITICAL POWER
POWER PARITY
PRIVATE CAPITAL
PRIVATE CAPITAL FLOWS
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCT MARKETS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PROTECTIONISM
PUBLIC DEBT
PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
PURCHASING POWER
RAPID GROWTH
RATE OF RETURN
REAL EXCHANGE RATES
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
RETURN ON INVESTMENT
SAVINGS
SAVINGS RATES
SCARCE CAPITAL
SEIGNIORAGE
SOCIAL CAPITAL
SOCIAL PROTECTION
STABILIZATION POLICIES
STATE ENTERPRISES
STRUCTURAL CHANGE
SURPLUS LABOR
TARIFF BARRIERS
TAX
TAX COLLECTION
TAX SYSTEM
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRANSACTION
TRANSACTION COSTS
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNFAIR COMPETITION
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WEALTH
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
WORLD ECONOMIES
WORLD ECONOMY
WORLD MARKET
WORLD MARKETS
WORLD TRADE
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
Lin, Justin Yifu
Treichel, Volker
Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Latin America & Caribbean
relation Policy Research Working Paper;6165
description This paper discusses the causes of the middle-income trap in Latin America and the Caribbean, identifies the challenges and opportunities for Latin America that come from China's rise, and draws lessons from New Structural Economics and the Growth Identification and Facilitation Framework to help Latin America escape the middle-income trap. Countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are caught in a middle-income trap due to their inability to structurally upgrade from low value-added to high value-added products. Governments in Latin America and the Caribbean should intervene in industries in which they have a comparative advantage, calibrating supporting policies in close collaboration with the private sector through public-private sector alliances. Through continuous structural upgrading in sectors intensive in factors such as natural resources, scientific knowledge, and unskilled labor, the region could achieve dynamic growth. This would require investments in education, research and development, and physical infrastructure. Therefore, industrial upgrading and diversification would be essential to avoid further de-industrialization arising from the competitive pressures of the rise of China, broaden the base for economic growth, and create the basis for further sustained reduction in unemployment, poverty and income inequality. Failure to do so would lead to a loss of competitiveness and risks of further de-industrialization.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Lin, Justin Yifu
Treichel, Volker
author_facet Lin, Justin Yifu
Treichel, Volker
author_sort Lin, Justin Yifu
title Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America
title_short Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America
title_full Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America
title_fullStr Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America
title_sort learning from china's rise to escape the middle-income trap : a new structural economics approach to latin america
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/08/16593868/learning-chinas-rise-escape-middle-income-trap-new-structural-economics-approach-latin-america
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12013
_version_ 1764418692379049984
spelling okr-10986-120132021-04-23T14:02:58Z Learning from China's Rise to Escape the Middle-Income Trap : A New Structural Economics Approach to Latin America Lin, Justin Yifu Treichel, Volker ACCOUNTING ADVANCED COUNTRIES ADVANCED COUNTRY ADVANCED ECONOMIES AFFILIATES AGRICULTURE BANK OF KOREA BANKING CRISES BANKING SUPERVISION BANKING SYSTEM BANKS BASE YEAR BENCHMARKS BINDING CONSTRAINTS BUDGET DEFICITS BUSINESS CYCLES CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL INFLOWS CAPITAL INTENSITY COMMERCIAL BANK COMMODITIES COMMODITY COMMODITY EXPORTS COMMODITY PRICES COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPETITIVE MARKET COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMERS CONTINGENT LIABILITIES CREDIT POLICIES CURRENCY DEBT DEBT CRISES DEBT CRISIS DEMOGRAPHIC DEMOGRAPHIC CHANGES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPING ECONOMIES DEVELOPMENT BANKS DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DIMINISHING RETURNS DISPOSABLE INCOME DIVIDENDS DYNAMIC ECONOMIES ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC HISTORY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POWERHOUSE ECONOMIC REFORM ECONOMIC REFORMS ECONOMIC STRUCTURE ECONOMIES OF SCALE EMERGING ECONOMIES EMERGING MARKET EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES EMERGING MARKETS ENERGY RESOURCES EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES EXCHANGE RATES EXPORT BASE EXPORT MARKETS EXPORTS EXPOSURE EXTERNALITY FACTORS OF PRODUCTION FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL INSTITUTION FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL MARKETS FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SECTORS FINANCIAL STABILITY FINANCIAL SUPPORT FINANCIAL SYSTEM FINANCIAL SYSTEMS FISCAL CONSOLIDATION FISCAL DEFICIT FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE FORECASTS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN TRADE FUTURE GROWTH GDP GDP DEFLATOR GDP PER CAPITA GLOBAL ECONOMIC LANDSCAPE GLOBAL ECONOMY GLOBAL EXPORTS GLOBAL MARKET GLOBAL OUTPUT GLOBAL RISK GLOBALIZATION GNP GOVERNMENT DEBT GOVERNMENT INTERVENTIONS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH OF MULTINATIONAL GROWTH POTENTIAL GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES GROWTH THEORY HUMAN CAPITAL INCOME INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME GROWTH INCOME INEQUALITY INDIVIDUAL FIRMS INDUSTRIAL COUNTRIES INDUSTRIALIZATION INFLATION INFLATION TARGETING INFLATIONARY FINANCING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INFRASTRUCTURE REQUIREMENTS INTANGIBLE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT DECISION INVESTMENT POLICY JOINT VENTURES LABOR COSTS LAWS LEGISLATION LIBERALIZATION LIVING STANDARDS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES LOW-INCOME COUNTRY MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION MACROECONOMIC VULNERABILITIES MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES MARGINAL COST MARKET ACCESS MARKET FAILURES MARKET PARTICIPANTS MARKET SHARE MARKET SHARES MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY MIGRATION MONETARY POLICY MONOPOLY MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCES NEOCLASSICAL MODELS NET EXPORTS NEW MARKETS NONPERFORMING LOANS OUTPUT OUTPUTS PER CAPITA INCOME PER CAPITA INCOMES POLITICAL POWER POWER PARITY PRIVATE CAPITAL PRIVATE CAPITAL FLOWS PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATIZATION PRODUCT MARKETS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROTECTIONISM PUBLIC DEBT PUBLIC ENTERPRISES PURCHASING POWER RAPID GROWTH RATE OF RETURN REAL EXCHANGE RATES RESOURCE ALLOCATION RETURN ON INVESTMENT SAVINGS SAVINGS RATES SCARCE CAPITAL SEIGNIORAGE SOCIAL CAPITAL SOCIAL PROTECTION STABILIZATION POLICIES STATE ENTERPRISES STRUCTURAL CHANGE SURPLUS LABOR TARIFF BARRIERS TAX TAX COLLECTION TAX SYSTEM TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRANSACTION TRANSACTION COSTS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT UNEMPLOYMENT UNFAIR COMPETITION VALUE ADDED WAGES WEALTH WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS WORLD ECONOMIES WORLD ECONOMY WORLD MARKET WORLD MARKETS WORLD TRADE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION This paper discusses the causes of the middle-income trap in Latin America and the Caribbean, identifies the challenges and opportunities for Latin America that come from China's rise, and draws lessons from New Structural Economics and the Growth Identification and Facilitation Framework to help Latin America escape the middle-income trap. Countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are caught in a middle-income trap due to their inability to structurally upgrade from low value-added to high value-added products. Governments in Latin America and the Caribbean should intervene in industries in which they have a comparative advantage, calibrating supporting policies in close collaboration with the private sector through public-private sector alliances. Through continuous structural upgrading in sectors intensive in factors such as natural resources, scientific knowledge, and unskilled labor, the region could achieve dynamic growth. This would require investments in education, research and development, and physical infrastructure. Therefore, industrial upgrading and diversification would be essential to avoid further de-industrialization arising from the competitive pressures of the rise of China, broaden the base for economic growth, and create the basis for further sustained reduction in unemployment, poverty and income inequality. Failure to do so would lead to a loss of competitiveness and risks of further de-industrialization. 2012-12-21T20:25:44Z 2012-12-21T20:25:44Z 2012-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/08/16593868/learning-chinas-rise-escape-middle-income-trap-new-structural-economics-approach-latin-america http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12013 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;6165 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research East Asia and Pacific Latin America & Caribbean