Research Catalog

Why are Some Countries so Poor? Another Look at the Evidence and a Message of Hope

Title
Why are Some Countries so Poor? [electronic resource]: Another Look at the Evidence and a Message of Hope / Daniel Cohen and Marcelo Soto
Author
Cohen, Daniel.
Publication
Paris : OECD Publishing, 2002.

Available Online

Full text online available onsite at NYPL

Details

Additional Authors
Soto, Marcelo.
Description
32 p.; 21 x 29.7cm.
Summary
The paper attempts to explain why single factor explanations of the poverty of nations are usually found to be unsatisfactory. Middle- and low-income countries excluding sub-Saharan Africa, for instance, have an income per head which stands at about one third of the rich countries' income per head. Yet each of the three items of the Solow model, namely human capital, physical capital (appropriated weighted) and total factor productivity, are each equal to about 70 per cent of the corresponding levels of rich countries. But 70 per cent to the power of three is 35 per cent! Multiplying small or relatively benign handicaps can yield dramatic effects on a country's income. The paper then moves on to explain each of the three items. It argues that the Lucas paradox on why capital is scarce can readily be solved, once market prices rather than PPP prices are used to assess the return to capital mobility, and on the same ground it argues that PPP calculations bias downwards the TFP of ...
Series Statement
OECD Development Centre Working Papers, 1815-1949 ; no.197
Uniform Title
OECD Development Centre Working Papers, no.197.
Subject
Development
LCCN
10.1787/205835882383
OCLC
oecd-lib
Author
Cohen, Daniel.
Title
Why are Some Countries so Poor? [electronic resource]: Another Look at the Evidence and a Message of Hope / Daniel Cohen and Marcelo Soto
Imprint
Paris : OECD Publishing, 2002.
Series
OECD Development Centre Working Papers, 1815-1949 ; no.197
OECD Development Centre Working Papers, 1815-1949 ; no.197.
Connect to:
Full text online available onsite at NYPL
Indexed Term
Development
Added Author
Soto, Marcelo.
Other Standard Identifier
10.1787/205835882383 doi
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