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Beyond Commodities shows that Latin America and the Caribbean's
growth performance over the last decade cannot be reduced to the
commodity boom: growth-promoting reforms that strengthened
financial development, increased trade openness and improved
infrastructure development also played a significant role and can
continue doing so. Based on the econometric analysis of panel data
from the 1970-2010 period for 126 countries, the study shows that,
while the commodity boom facilitated growth in most of the region,
it did not determine it. Domestic pro-growth policies and the
maintenance of a sound macro-fiscal framework played a central role
in explaining the region's good performance during last decade. It
also shows that new growth "stars" such as Panama, Peru, Colombia
and the Dominican Republic emerged during this period. In addition,
a benchmarking exercise reveals which policy gaps will lead to the
highest potential growth-payoffs for each country and helps
identify potential trade-offs. Finally, with the worsening of
external conditions, the authors conclude that the countries of
Latin America and the Caribbean have no choice but to turn their
attention to domestic drivers to keep growth going, as the
structural reforms agenda remains unfinished.
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