Economic Growth

More from the Series

Blog Post
If India Stopped Growing, Would the IMF and World Bank Say So?
October 29, 2019
Leading economic indicators have slowed or reversed. Criticisms of official statistics are mounting. But the IMF and World Bank continue to forecast 6-percent growth by simple extrapolation.
Blog Post
Robots and Economic Development: Is “Catch-up” Growth a Thing of the Past?
October 09, 2019
Why isn’t the entire world developed? No question is more central to economic historians and scholars of development, with the elusive answer directly impacting billions of people living in underdevelopment and poverty.
Blog Post
What Are We Learning from Lab-in-the-Field Experiments in Developing Countries?
June 06, 2019
By my count, social scientists have now run experiments measuring individual preferences in over 100 countries.
Blog Post
Changing Norms Around Gender and Economic Rewards
May 21, 2019
A world where risk-taking and competition weren’t considered quite so admirable or so male, and where more stereotypically “feminine” traits like cooperation were properly recognized and rewarded, would be better for both women and men.
Amolo Ng’weno et al.
April 23, 2019

How will the “technological revolution” impact the nature of work in developing countries? On the one hand, many jobs in developing countries—in manufacturing, agriculture, and services—lend themselves to automation. On the other hand, just because something can be automated doesn’t mean it will be. Relative factor prices, regulatory and policy frameworks, and institutional capacities to manage new technology can influence the pace of technological adaptation. Some analyses—including by CGD colleagues—find dark clouds on the horizon; others see a silver lining.

Where we come out matters. If automation makes light manufacturing uncompetitive in most developing countries, premature de-industrialization could become even more of a risk and the traditional path to higher-productivity jobs and higher incomes begins to look ephemeral. Can new jobs in the digital economy provide enough of an offsetting boom and help developing countries leapfrog into a brighter future? We know that current education systems aren’t delivering the skills needed for tomorrow’s jobs but what might come in their place? What advice can we offer developing country policymakers to help them navigate through this uncertainty?

In this inaugural CGD Debates in Development, we’ve invited experts to weigh in on these questions. I hope you’ll join the conversation, too. In two weeks, I’ll post a wrap up of our discussion. Stay tuned!

Blog Post
It's Technology, Stupid: How Important is Innovation for Better Development Outcomes?
April 10, 2019
While income growth has been labeled "the holy grail of development," new analysis from Owen Barder, Lee Robinson, and Euan Ritchie suggests that there is just as much value in focusing on promoting innovation and the spread of technology.
Blog Post
What’s the Latest Economics Research on Africa? A Round-up from the Center for the Study of African Economies 2019 Conference
March 26, 2019
Last week’s annual Center for the Study of African Economies (CSAE) conference brought together researchers from the African continent and around the world for the presentation of nearly 300 papers about nearly every aspect of African societies, from agriculture to education to firms...