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Security and Economic Growth

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Title: Security and Economic Growth


1
Security and Economic Growth
Michael Spence Brisbane January2008
2
Outline
  • The Commission
  • The Key Ingredients in Sustained High Growth
    Dynamics
  • The Role of Government
  • Critical policy and investment priorities
  • The Multiple dimensions of security
  • Security as input and output
  • Political and Economic Channels through which the
    interaction between security and economic
    performance occur

3
Origins
  • Economic Growth in the 1990s Gobind Nankani
  • Concern that what were thought to be necessary
    and sufficient conditions were just necessary
  • Advanced versus developing economies
  • Accumulation of relevant experience in many
    countries both high growth and low
  • Loss of visibility of growth
  • Not as ultimate objective but powerful instrument
  • In poverty reduction in particular
  • MDGs
  • Divergence between policy advice and behavior in
    high growth cases
  •  

4
Sustained Growth Time Horizons
5
Mandate of the Commission
  • The focus is sustained high inclusive growth and
    the policies, investments and political
    underpinnings that support it
  • Goal help increase the number and sustainability
    of growth accelerations
  • Sustained means over several decades
  • Inclusive is meant to capture more than income
    opportunity, productive employment, access to
    services
  • Primary target audience political and policy
    leaders in developing countries with
    responsibility for strategies and policies for
    growth
  • We understand (and are explicit) that growth is
    not the end goal but a means to several ends
    poverty reduction, human development, health,
    safety, the opportunity to work and to be
    creative

6
Sustained High Growth is Difficult to Achieve
  • Some of the literature gives the impression
    that it is after all pretty easy to increase the
    long-run growth rate. Just reduce a tax on
    capital here or eliminate an inefficient
    regulation there, and the reward is fabulous, a
    higher growth rate forever, which is surely more
    valuable than any lingering bleeding-heart
    reservations about the policy itself. But in real
    life it is very hard to move the permanent growth
    rate and when it happens, as perhaps in the USA
    in the later 1990s, the source can be a bit
    mysterious even after the fact.

(Bob Solow, 2007, Oxford Review of Economic
Policy) On the 50th anniversary of the Solow Model
7
Growth Dynamics
  • 12 cases of sustained high growth (7 or more for
    25 years or more)
  • Botswana, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan,
    Korea, Malaysia, Malta, Oman, Singapore, Taiwan
    and Thailand
  • India and Vietnam are close because of growth
    accelerations in the past 10-15 years
  • There may be others because of recent growth
    accelerations (in part dues to upward shift in
    the relative price of energy, commodities and
    food. Demand induced
  • The jury is out on whether these initial growth
    accelerations can be transformed into sustainable
    growth dynamics rapid employment creation and
    structural diversification

8
Common Ingredients
  • Leveraging global economy demand and knowledge
  • Market incentives and decentralization
  • High levels (and effectiveness) of savings and
    public and private investment
  • Rapid diversification and incremental productive
    employment
  • Structural transformation
  • Resource mobility especially labor across
    sectors and
  • Rapid urbanization

9
  • Stable and functional investment environment
  • Political leadership and effective, pragmatic and
    when needed activist government
  • Multi decade process
  • strategies, priorities and role of government
    evolves
  • Pragmatism and willingness to experiment
  • A focus on inclusive growth combined with
    persistence and determination
  • Government that acts in the interests of all the
    citizens of the country as opposed to itself or
    subgroups

10
China GDP per capita and Poverty Reduction
11
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12
Saving and Investment
13
Leveraging the Global Economy
14
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15
Income Inequality
16
The Role of Government
  • Stabilize, liberalize and privatize
  • Is often an important part of the story
  • Undoing an overly intrusive or oversized
    government
  • But it is more complicated than that
  • Better government rather than less government is
    another part of the story
  • Role of government evolves over time (the China
    case)
  • as the economy matures , expands its capabilities
    and integrates into the global economy
  • Dealing with bottle necks
  • Investor with long time horizon (education and
    infrastructure)
  • Model uncertainty and institutional development
  • Getting the model or strategy right
  • Leadership, vision, communication, consensus
    building

17
Necessary and Sufficient Conditions
  • A this stage of our understanding of economic
    development, no one knows with a sufficient
    degree of conviction, the necessary and
    sufficient conditions for growth.
  • It would be preferable if it were otherwise.
  • Focusing on the critical policies and
    investments, with suitable adjustments for
    initial conditions across countries and time,
    will materially increase the likelihood of
    elevating growth.

18
Key Policy Priorities and Challenges
  • The following are the focus of much or our
    ongoing discussion
  • Also areas of widespread under performance
  • Leadership
  • Equity and equality of opportunity and
    inclusiveness
  • Access to the market economy, finance, and the
    legal system
  • Public sector investment
  • Data poor and investment levels on average way
    below high growth levels
  • You get what you measure
  • Environmental aspects of growth
  • Health
  • Education

19
Policy Priorities Continued
  • Competition and structural change
  • The dynamics of productivity growth
  • Entry and exit (firms and sectors)
  • Industrial Policies and Export Promotion and the
    Role of Government in the Dynamics of Comparative
    Advantage
  • Exchange Rates
  • Open economy capital account management
  • Cost of capital and risk management
  • Pace and sequencing of the opening of the current
    and capital account

20
Enabling Diversification, Structural
Transformation and Growth
  • Labor mobility
  • Labor markets
  • Urbanization
  • Technology and Knowledge Transfer
  • Policy levers wrt the speed of catch up
  • Agricultures Place in the Strategy
  • Effective Government and Implementation

21
Cases with Important Special Challenges
  • Small States
  • Lack of diversification and heightened exposure
    to economic and natural risks and shocks
  • Governance overhead costs
  • Resource Rich (or fairly rich) Countries
  • Prone to conflict and governance problems
  • Distortion of the political economy towards rents
  • Challenge of economic diversification and
    expanding employment opportunity
  • African countries in various categories
  • Landlocked percentage vulnerability to weakness
    of neighbors
  • Climate change
  • Tribal and ethnic diversity incompletely
    mediated by the governance systems
  • Middle income to high income transitions
  • Perceived threat of loss of basis of
    competitiveness
  • Shift policies and investment to facilitate the
    transition to human capital intensive basis for
    structural change and dynamic comparative
    advantage
  • Evolution of interventions (industrial policy,
    exchange rate) used to jump start export
    diversification and growth, before they become
    distortionary and dysfunctional

22
Global Trends Opportunities and Challenges
  • Rising income inequality and resistance to
    globalization
  • Pew Report
  • US elections
  • Global Warming and Developing Countries
  • The Growth of China and India
  • Large long term shifts in relative prices labor
    intensive manufactured goods, energy and
    commodities
  • It is a demand and a supply shock because of
    the scale
  • Demographics, Aging and Migration
  • Global Governance, Imbalances and the Rising
    Influence and Impact of Developing Countries
  • The challenge of policy coordination with new
    important players

23
Security
  • We will learn a great deal about security in the
    next three days
  • Enormous range of issues and categories from
    getting to school safely, to conflict, crime,
    economic security in various dimensions, natural
    disasters, responses and insurance, and more
  • Security in all its dimensions is highly valued
    individually and social (in groupings ranging
    from local to global)
  • That and the better part of humanity, the empathy
    that underlies the concern, is the best
    justification for focusing on all of the issues
    of
  • Causes
  • Prevention
  • Response when adversity strikes

24
Security and Growth
  • Security and growth interact
  • Like human development and fulfillment, security
    is one of the most important inputs to and
    outputs of growth
  • On the output side, growth enhances security
    through a variety of channels
  • Reduced vulnerability to economic shocks
  • Capacity for adaptation in the case of global
    warming
  • Movement away from the zero sum game and the
    political economy and conflict prone incentives
    that go with it
  • Reduced dependence on some outside influences and
    agendas in determining economy trajectories
  • Growing influence in global decision-making with
    local consequences
  • Affordability of social safety nets and
    protections, investment in health, and enhanced
    capacity for self-insurance at the national level
  • Youth unemployment and related adverse
    consequences in terms of crime, disaffection and
    political instability and conflict

25
The Vulnerable in Terms of Economic Security
26
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27
The Effects of Security Problems on Growth
  • Are very large and operate through multiple
    channel
  • Here I repeat that adverse growth effects are not
    the main reason for serious attention to security
  • But the effects are real they tend to operate
    on growth via investment channels
  • Ongoing research is helping to understand the
    magnitudes and channels
  • Much more needs to be done.

28
Cases Where The Effect is Large
  • To the point that it deserves a high priority on
    a growth policy agenda
  • Early childhood nutrition
  • Large and very long terms adverse affects on
    cognitive and non-cognitive skills agenda
  • Increasing the economic and other risks of
    investment (domestic and foreign)
  • The latter is closely related to inbound
    knowledge transfer a key driver of sustained
    high growth
  • Dramatic reductions in longevity reduce
    incentives and investment in human capital and
    other assets where the payback period is long
  • Economic security, equality of opportunity and
    outcomes, and protection against the downside
    risks of exposure to the global economy
  • Affects the ability to sustain growth oriented
    policies and investments in the face of political
    headwinds

29
Energy Security, Global Warming and Conflict
  • Right now the legitimate concern seems to be
    rising energy and commodity prices on poorer
    countries
  • The fraction of household income going to energy
    and food is much higher in poorer countries and
    communities and families
  • But the problem is much larger
  • There is a clear scramble for energy security
    with a kind of prisoners dilemma incentive
    structure
  • Except for the adverse distributional effects,
    agreeing on the high prices and its attendant
    positive incentives (energy efficiency, new
    technology) is clearly better but it takes
    cooperation at a high level
  • Potential for conflict is real.
  • Add global warming targets that are safe (but may
    be costly and highly constraining) and we are
    moving back toward an environment that is closer
    to zero sum (Martin Wolfe, FT late December)

30
One bit of good news
31
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32
Final Thoughts
  • From a growth perspective, security and risk
    management in multiple dimensions is a critical
    ingredient
  • And the reverse is true security problems and
    vulnerabilities lower growth potential and
    therefore impair the achievement of many
    important objectives
  • There is much research to be done on causes,
    effective interventions and responses, insurance
    and risk spreading
  • We may be entering a period in which natural
    disasters and very large shifts in the
    configuration of the global economy are the main
    sources of security challenges
  • At the moment, we are probably collectively not
    very well prepared to deal with them.

33
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34
Gini Coefficients
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