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Stages of growth in economic development

✍ Scribed by Michal Kejak


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
324 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
0165-1889

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✦ Synopsis


The paper analyses a two-sector model of endogenous growth with two common features of economic development: stages of sustained growth and underdevelopment traps. The model also demonstrates the transitional issues of a temporary underdevelopment trap, seemingly sustainable growth, and a slowdown in productivity growth. The temporary underdevelopment trap occurs when an economy exhibits a regime of extensive growth (i.e. slowly declining growth in physical capital with no growth in human capital), but thereafter starts a transition to sustained growth. Seemingly sustainable growth happens when an economy exhibits a regime of intensive growth (i.e. both capitals grow initially) but the growth of human capital subsequently ceases and the economy eventually ΓΏnds itself in a zero growth trap. The model also exhibits the possibility of a slowdown in productivity growth as a temporary phenomenon during the transition from the low growth stage to the high growth stage of an economy facing a new "industrial" revolution.


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