TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-examining the Middle-Income Trap Hypothesis (MITH): What to Reject and What to Revive?
AU - Han, Xuehui
AU - Wei, Shang-Jin
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Do middle-income countries face difficult challenges producing consistent growth? Using transition matrix analysis, we can easily reject any unconditional notion of a middle-income trap in the data. However, countries have different fundamentals and policies. Using a nonparametric classification technique, we search for variables that separate fast- and slow-growing countries. For middle-income countries, a relatively large working age population, sex ratio imbalance, macroeconomic stability, and financial development appear to be the key discriminatory variables. We do the same exercise for low-income countries. This framework yields conditions under which countries in the low- and middle-income ranges move forward or backward, or are trapped.
AB - Do middle-income countries face difficult challenges producing consistent growth? Using transition matrix analysis, we can easily reject any unconditional notion of a middle-income trap in the data. However, countries have different fundamentals and policies. Using a nonparametric classification technique, we search for variables that separate fast- and slow-growing countries. For middle-income countries, a relatively large working age population, sex ratio imbalance, macroeconomic stability, and financial development appear to be the key discriminatory variables. We do the same exercise for low-income countries. This framework yields conditions under which countries in the low- and middle-income ranges move forward or backward, or are trapped.
U2 - 10.1016/j.jimonfin.2017.01.004
DO - 10.1016/j.jimonfin.2017.01.004
M3 - Article
VL - 73
SP - 41
EP - 61
JO - Journal of International Money and Finance
JF - Journal of International Money and Finance
ER -