This book sets outs the conceptual underpinnings of the Middle-Income Trap and explores the various ways it can be defined. It also focuses on the debate surrounding the Middle-Income Trap which questions the appropriate institutional and policy settings for middle-income countries to enable them to continue past the easy phase of economic growth. The book engages with this debate by investigating the role of institutions, human capital, and trade policy in helping countries increase their income levels and by highlighting factors which enable the shift to higher and qualitatively better growth.
Francis E. Hutchinson is a Senior Fellow and Coordinator of the Regional Economic Studies Programme at ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore and Managing Editor of the Journal of Southeast Asian Economies.
Sanchita Basu Das is a Fellow and Lead Researcher in Economics at the ASEAN Studies Centre and the Coordinator of the Singapore APEC Study Centre, both based in the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore. She is also a co-editor of the Journal of Southeast Asian Economies.
Preface
1. Asia and the Middle-Income Trap: An Overview
2. The Middle-Income Trap Turns 10
3. Resilience and Escaping Development Traps: Lessons for Asian-Pacific Economies
4. Can China Rise to High Income?
5. Is Indonesia Trapped in the Middle?
6. India: Escaping Low-Income Traps and Averting Middle-Income Ones
7. Institutional Quality and Growth Traps
8. Avoiding "Tiger" Traps: How Human Capital Can Propel Countries beyond Middle-Income Status in East Asia
9. Escaping the Middle-Income Trap: Trade, Investment and Innovation