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Developing countries to cushion rich-country slowdown in 2008... Press release
(on global outlook; multilingual)
Global Economic Prospects for Developing Countries 2008
Complete Report (5.4mb pdf)
Table of Contents, Foreword and Acknowledgements (62k pdf)
Overview in English (459k pdf)
This edition of Global Economic Prospects is being released during a period of increased uncertainty following four years of record growth in developing countries. In addition to examining economic prospects over the near and longer term, it takes an in-depth look at the current level of and recent trends in technological achievement and the main factors that determine the extent to which developing countries succeed in implementing foreign technologies.
Notwithstanding the financial turmoil provoked by a reassessment of risks in the U.S. mortgage market, and despite large losses in some financial markets, exposure to asset backed securities appears to be broadly based. Losses so far have been manageable, although credit conditions have tightened. For developing economies, sovereign risk premiums have increased but remain low by historical standards. Equity values, exchange rates, and commodity prices have become more volatile, and the vulnerability of countries with large current account deficits or pegged exchange rates has become more visible.

Chapter 1: Prospects for Developing Countries
(1.2mb pdf)
Following the sudden and sharp drop in market valuations of U.S. mortgage-backed securities in mid-2007, global markets have entered a phase of heightened uncertainty. This has been reflected in increased volatility in equity markets, commodity prices, and exchange rates. Notwithstanding the increased volatility, the impact on developing countries has been relatively minor to date. Risk premiums have escalated, but remain relatively low in a historic context, and capital inflows remain plentiful, although bank lending has dropped off. Aggregate growth in developing countries continues to be strong, reflecting improved fundamentals in many countries, sizable revenues from commodity exports, and continued access to international finance at moderately higher cost. Their strong gross domestic product (GDP) growth is partially offsetting weaker U.S. domestic demand, which is now expected to remain subdued well into 2008. Despite the resilience demonstrated by the global economy, risks exist and increased volatility has made several developing countries more vulnerable to financial disturbance, especially those with large current account deficits, pegged exchange rates, or domestic banking sectors that have borrowed heavily in international markets.
Chapter 2: Technology and Technological Diffusion in Developing Countries
(1.5mb pdf)
Technological progress—improvements in the techniques (including firm organization) by which goods and services are produced, marketed, and brought to market—is at the heart of human progress and development. At the national level, technological progress can occur through invention and innovation; through the adoption and adaptation of preexisting but new-to-the-market technologies; and through the spread of technologies across firms, individuals, and the public sector within a country. For developing countries, the bulk of technological progress occurs through the latter two channels. Much of this chapter is concerned with measuring the extent to which this process has occurred in countries in different regions and at different income levels.

Chapter 3: Determinants of Technological Progress: Recent Trends and Prospects
(960k pdf)
As discussed in the previous chapter, the pace at which technologies spread between and within countries has picked up. As a result, most developing countries are narrowing the technological divide that separates them from high-income countries. Nevertheless, the technology gap remains large; for many, including several low-income countries, it is widening rather than closing, in part because of the slowness with which technologies spread within countries. For virtually all developing countries, the domestic pace of technological progress is determined mainly by the speed with which already existing technologies are adopted, adapted, and successfully applied domestically, and done so throughout the economy, not just in the main cities. This chapter explores some of the major determinants of this kind of within-country diffusion of technology. It adopts an analytical framework that distinguishes between the


Appendix: Regional Economic Prospects
(750k pdf)
East Asia and the Pacific Recent developments Growth in the developing countries of East Asia and the Pacific strengthened in 2007, with gross domestic product (GDP) advancing a full 10 percent in the year, up from 9.7 percent in 2006. The expansion was powered by China’s 11.3 percent gain, with other countries in the region growing at a 5.9 percent pace. Domestic demand was a key driving force for many economies, as a downturn in the global high-tech cycle for most of 2006–07 served to blunt the momentum of...


About the Report

Global Economic Prospects 2008: Technology Diffusion in the Developing World

“Rapid technological progress in developing countries has been central to the reduction of poverty in recent decades. While the integration of global markets has played and will continue to play a key role in this, future success will increasingly depend on strengthening technical competencies and the business environment for innovative firms in developing countries.”

— Graeme Wheeler
Managing Director, The World Bank


Technology and technological progress are central to economic and social well-being. The creation and diffusion of goods and services are critical drivers of economic growth, rising incomes, social progress, and medical progress. Global Economic Prospects 2008: Technology Diffusion in the Developing World examines the state of technology in developing countries and the pace with which it has advanced since the early 1990s.

It reveals both encouraging and cautionary trends. On the one hand, the pace of technological progress in developing countries has been much faster than in high-income countries—reflecting increased exposure to foreign technology as a result of linkages with high-skilled diasporas and the opening of these countries to international trade and foreign direct investment.

On the other hand, the technology gap remains large, and the domestic factors that determine how quickly technologies spread within developing countries often stymie progress, especially among low-income countries. Repeating the rapid progress of this past decade will be difficult and may require that basic technology literacy is improved further; that government efforts to adapt and disseminate pre-existing technologies throughout the economy are strengthened; and that regulatory regimes are modified to encourage business innovation.

This year’s Global Economic Prospects comes on the heels of an extended period of strong growth and a 15-year period of strong performance in much of the developing world that has contributed to substantial declines in global poverty. While high oil prices and heightened market volatility may signal a coming pause in this process, over the longer term continued technological progress should continue to push back poverty.

An online companion to the prospects section of this report, including access to additional data and analysis not reported here, is available at www.worldbank.org/globaloutlook.

 

 


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