Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Executive Summary
- Chapter 1 What Is Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 2 What Is the Main Constraint that Developing Countries Face?
- Chapter 3 Why Full Employment and Who Should Be Responsible for Trying to Achieve It?
- Chapter 4 Why Is Growth Unstable?
- Chapter 5 What Is the Role of Agriculture in the Process of Structural Change and in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment I
- Chapter 6 What Is the Role of Investment in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment II
- Chapter 7 Why Is “Planning Development” Necessary?
- Chapter 8 What Is Industrial Policy? Full Employment III
- Chapter 9 Structural Transformation, Industrialization, and Technological Change in Developing Asia: What Does the Empirical Evidence Show?
- Chapter 10 Why Do Export Diversification and Sophistication Matter?
- Chapter 11 Unemployment Versus Inflation: Which One Should Be the Public Enemy Number One?
- Chapter 12 What Should Be the Role of Fiscal and Monetary Policies for Development? Full Employment IV
- Chapter 13 Is It Possible to Achieve Full Employment in the Presence of Structural Transformation?
- Chapter 14 Should the Government (Public Sector) Intervene Directly and Become the Employer of Last Resort? Full Employment V
- Chapter 15 Can Competitiveness and Globalization Deliver Inclusiveness and Full Employment?
- Chapter 16 Export-Led Growth or Domestic Demand–Led Growth?
- Chapter 17 Is Education a Key Ingredient of Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 18 Conclusions: How Can Developing Countries Implement an Inclusive-Growth and Full-Employment Strategy?
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Chapter 1 - What Is Inclusive Growth?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2020
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Foreword
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Executive Summary
- Chapter 1 What Is Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 2 What Is the Main Constraint that Developing Countries Face?
- Chapter 3 Why Full Employment and Who Should Be Responsible for Trying to Achieve It?
- Chapter 4 Why Is Growth Unstable?
- Chapter 5 What Is the Role of Agriculture in the Process of Structural Change and in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment I
- Chapter 6 What Is the Role of Investment in Delivering Full Employment? Full Employment II
- Chapter 7 Why Is “Planning Development” Necessary?
- Chapter 8 What Is Industrial Policy? Full Employment III
- Chapter 9 Structural Transformation, Industrialization, and Technological Change in Developing Asia: What Does the Empirical Evidence Show?
- Chapter 10 Why Do Export Diversification and Sophistication Matter?
- Chapter 11 Unemployment Versus Inflation: Which One Should Be the Public Enemy Number One?
- Chapter 12 What Should Be the Role of Fiscal and Monetary Policies for Development? Full Employment IV
- Chapter 13 Is It Possible to Achieve Full Employment in the Presence of Structural Transformation?
- Chapter 14 Should the Government (Public Sector) Intervene Directly and Become the Employer of Last Resort? Full Employment V
- Chapter 15 Can Competitiveness and Globalization Deliver Inclusiveness and Full Employment?
- Chapter 16 Export-Led Growth or Domestic Demand–Led Growth?
- Chapter 17 Is Education a Key Ingredient of Inclusive Growth?
- Chapter 18 Conclusions: How Can Developing Countries Implement an Inclusive-Growth and Full-Employment Strategy?
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
We need to make growth more inclusive—to expand access to opportunities so that all can participate, regardless of their individual circumstances.
—Haruhiko Kuroda, ADB's President (2008)During the last few years, terms such as “harmonious society” in the People's Republic of China (PRC), “sufficient economy” in Thailand, and similar terms in other countries across Asia, have made their way into the discourse of policy makers. The message in all cases is similar: development is more than growth. The Commission on Growth and Development (2008) in its Growth Report also echoes the same sentiment. The Government of India, for example, boasts to have fostered “inclusive growth.” By this it means that the budget has increased allocations to school meals or rural road-building. The high-growth policies implemented across the region since the 1960s were successful and led to increases in per capita income and dramatic reductions in poverty, contributing to closing the gap with the developed world. But today a feeling has spread that policies and objectives need to be revised as citizens across Asia demand more than growth. Inequality, productive and decent employment, the environment, health, and climate change are becoming increasingly important in the agendas of policy makers. Institutions such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank also acknowledge the issue and argue that growth and globalization have to be inclusive.
What is inclusive growth? Although the term has not been formally defined, Ali and Zhuang (2007, 10) claim that a consensus is emerging as to what it means: “growth with equal opportunities.” In a related paper, Ali and Son (2007, 1–2) further argue that inclusive growth is “growth that not only creates new economic opportunities but also one that ensures equal access to the opportunities created for all segments of society. Growth is inclusive when it allows all members of a society to participate in, and contribute to, the growth process on an equal basis regardless of their individual circumstances” (Box 1.1 and Table 1.1 on the PRC).
In this book, I discuss the implications of inclusive growth for policy making in developing Asia. If the term inclusive growth is a useful concept, how should it be interpreted in developing policies? What sort of policies should be implemented to achieve it? What are the constraints and tradeoffs? And finally, can it be achieved?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Inclusive Growth, Full Employment, and Structural ChangeImplications and Policies for Developing Asia, pp. 1 - 6Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2010