Is Indonesia trapped in the middle?
Date
Authors
Aswicahyono, Haryo
Hill, Hal
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Few countries have experienced such dramatic changes in economic fortunes and
political governance as Indonesia. The world’s fourth most populous nation and
the tenth largest economy – in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms – it experienced
more or less continuous economic decline for at least half a century before
the mid-1960s (van der Eng, 2002). By then it was one of the world’s poorest
countries, characterized in the leading development economics text of the time as
‘a chronic economic dropout’ (Higgins, 1968), and one with little prospect of
development in the leading socio-economic survey of the period (Myrdal, 1968).
Then, in a remarkable turnaround, from 1966, the country achieved rapid economic
development for the next three decades, such that it was classified as one of the
‘East Asian miracle economies’ in the World Bank’s (1993) major comparative
study. Indonesia’s per capita GDP more than quadrupled over this period.
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Book Title
Asia and the Middle-Income Trap
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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