Finance and Development, March 2017

Globalization and trade have been blamed, but entrenched slow growth—what economists call secular stagnation—may be the real culprit.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 0054 Issue 001
Publication date: March 2017
ISBN: 9781475577150
$14.00
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Business and Economics , Nature , Social Science , Banks and Banking , Economics- Macroeconomics , Money and Monetary Policy , Natural Resources , Demography , FD , F&D , economy , can money , workforce benefit , productivity growth , utility price , polymer note , pension payment , prices in the shop , Productivity , Non-renewable resources , Income inequality , Aging , Global , Europe , Sub-Saharan Africa , Western Europe , East Asia

Summary

This paper reports about current mainstream growth projections for the United States and the European Union over the medium term represent a marked slowdown from growth rates in the decades prior to the global financial crisis. Slower growth in Europe and the United States has mixed implications for growth prospects in developing economies. Most obviously, on the negative side, it means less demand for these countries’ exports, so models of development based on export-led growth may need to be rethought. In contrast, for Western Europe the narrative is about catch-up growth rather than the rate of cutting-edge technological progress. From the middle of the 20th century to the recent global crisis, this experience comprised three distinct phases. European medium-term growth prospects depend both on how fast productivity grows in the United States and whether catch-up growth can resume after a long hiatus. Economic historians see social capability as a key determinant of success or failure in catch-up growth.