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The Day After Tomorrow - A Handbook on the Future of Economic Policy in the Developing World (Paperback)
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The Day After Tomorrow - A Handbook on the Future of Economic Policy in the Developing World (Paperback)
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The 2008 09 Global Finanical Crisis shook the ground under the
conventional wisdom that had guided mainstream development
economics. Much of what had been held as true for decades is now
open to reexamination from what the role of governments should be
in markets to which countries will be the engines of the world s
economy, from what people need to leave poverty to what businesses
need to stay competitive. Development economists look into the
future. They do not just ask how things work today, but how a new
policy, program, or project would make them work tomorrow. They
view the world and history as a learning process past and present
are inputs into thinking about what is coming. It is that appetite
for a vision of the future that led the authors of 'The Day after
Tomorrow: A Handbook on the Future of Economic Policy in the
Developing World' to invite some 40 development economists, most of
them from the World Bank s Poverty Reduction and Economic
Management Network an epicenter of the profession to report what
they see on the horizon of their technical disciplines and of their
geographic areas of specialization. The disconcerting but exciting
search for a new intellectual compact has begun. To help guide the
discussion, 'The Day after Tomorrow: A Handbook on the Future of
Economic Policy in the Developing World' puts forth four key
messages: While the developed world gets its house in order, and
macroeconomics and finance achieve a new consensus, developing
countries will become a (perhaps the) growth engine for the world.
Faster technological learning and more South-South integration will
fuel that engine. Governments in developing countries will be
better they may even begin to earn the trust of their people. A
new, smarter generation of social policy will bring the end of
poverty within reach, but the attainment of equality is another
matter. Many regions of the developing world will break out of
their developing status and will graduate into something akin to
newly developed. Africa will eventually join that group. Others,
like Eastern Europe, have a legacy of problems to address before
such a transition. While some regions will do better than others,
and some technical areas will be clearer than others, there is no
question that the horizon of economic policy for developing
countries is promising risky, yes, but promising. The rebalancing
of global growth toward, at the very least, a multiplicity of
engines, will give the developing world a new relevance."
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