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Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1988

An East Asian model of economic development: Japan Taiwan and South Korea.

Paul W. Kuznets

The East Asian model of economic development focuses on 5 shared characteristics that seem significant in the contemporary economic development of Japan Taiwan and Korea. They are economic characteristics and include 1) high investment ratios 2) small public sectors 3) competitive labor markets 4) export expansion and 5) government intervention in the economy. Large and efficient investments in human capital and well-developed capacities to absorb new technology are 2 other economic features shared by The Three. One could add overcrowding (high man/land ratios) and scarcity of natural resources though these are handicaps rather than sources of economic strength. It is possible however that virtue springs from necessity and that ample arable land or abundant natural resources mainly permit governments to postpone the difficult decisions needed to promote development rather than provide the wherewithal needed to finance development. Other noneconomic characteristics of The Three such as ethnic and linguistic homogeneity relatively compact geography manageable population size and the Confucian tradition have not been considered in the model even though they have undoubtedly influenced labor productivity savings behavior and other aspects of economic performance. Whether the East Asian model ought to be followed depends on whether current and foreseeable circumstances are sufficiently like those faced by The Three to justify using the same policies that they used. Applicability of the East Asian model should also depend on whether the strategy employed by The Three has been responsible for their economic success. 2 aspects of the East Asian models policy features are noteworthy: 1) the policies typically work by influencing rather than replacing private market decisions and 2) the public expects government to intervene to influence economic growth.


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 2001

Youngil Lim . Technology and Productivity: The Korean Way of Learning and Catching Up :Technology and Productivity: The Korean Way of Learning and Catching Up

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 2001

REVIEWYoungil Lim.Technology and Productivity: The Korean Way of Learning and Catching Up. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1999. Pp. xx+1241.

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1998

45.00 (cloth).

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1998

Eun‐Mee Kim, Big Business, Strong State: Collusion and Conflict in South Korean Development, 1960–1990 :Big Business, Strong State: Collusion and Conflict in South Korean Development, 1960–1990

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1996

REVIEWEun‐Mee Kim.Big Business, Strong State: Collusion and Conflict in South Korean Development, 1960–1990. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1997. Pp. xvii+1280.

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1996

Book Review:The East Asian Miracle: Economic Growth and Public Policy World Bank; The Dynamics of Korean Development Cho Soon

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1992

The East Asian Miracle: Economic Growth and Public Policy. World BankThe Dynamics of Korean Development. Cho Soon

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1992

Book Review:The Rise of the Korean Economy Byung-Nak Song

Paul W. Kuznets


Economic Development and Cultural Change | 1986

The Rise of the Korean Economy. Byung-Nak Song

Paul W. Kuznets

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