World Development Report 2024 World Development Report 2024
World Development Report

World Development Report 2024

The Middle-Income Trap

    • ¥5,800
    • ¥5,800

Publisher Description

Middle-income countries are in a race against time. Many of them have done well since the 1990s to escape low-income levels and eradicate extreme poverty, leading to the perception that the last three decades have been great for development. But the ambition of the more than 100 economies with incomes per capita between US$1,100 and US$14,000 is to reach high-income status within the next generation. When assessed against this goal, their record is discouraging. Since the 1970s, income per capita in the median middle-income country has stagnated at less than a tenth of the US level. With aging populations, growing protectionism, and escalating pressures to speed up the energy transition, today's middle-income economies face ever more daunting odds. To become advanced economies despite the growing headwinds, they will have to make miracles. Drawing on the development experience and advances in economic analysis since the 1950s, World Development Report 2024 identifies pathways for developing economies to avoid the "middle-income trap." It points to the need for not one but two transitions for those at the middle-income level: the first from investment to infusion and the second from infusion to innovation. Governments in lower-middle-income countries must drop the habit of repeating the same investment-driven strategies and work instead to infuse modern technologies and successful business processes from around the world into their economies. This requires reshaping large swaths of those economies into globally competitive suppliers of goods and services. Upper-middle-income countries that have mastered infusion can accelerate the shift to innovation—not just borrowing ideas from the global frontiers of technology but also beginning to push the frontiers outward. This requires restructuring enterprise, work, and energy use once again, with an even greater emphasis on economic freedom, social mobility, and political contestability. Neither transition is automatic. The handful of economies that made speedy transitions from middle- to high-income status have encouraged enterprise by disciplining powerful incumbents, developed talent by rewarding merit, and capitalized on crises to alter policies and institutions that no longer suit the purposes they were once designed to serve. Today's middle-income countries will have to do the same.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2024
August 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
World Bank Publications
SELLER
Bookwire US Inc
SIZE
17.1
MB
The World Bank Annual Report 2014 The World Bank Annual Report 2014
2014
Atlas of Sustainable Development Goals 2018 Atlas of Sustainable Development Goals 2018
2018
Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016 Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016
2015
Business Ready 2024 Business Ready 2024
2024
International Debt Report 2024 International Debt Report 2024
2024
Poverty, Prosperity, and Planet Report 2024 Poverty, Prosperity, and Planet Report 2024
2024
World Development Report 2021 World Development Report 2021
2021
World Development Report 2022 World Development Report 2022
2022
World Development Report 2017 World Development Report 2017
2017
World Development Report 2023 World Development Report 2023
2023
World Development Report 2019 World Development Report 2019
2018
World Development Report 2016 World Development Report 2016
2016