Author/Authors
Lawn، نويسنده , , Philip M. Clarke، نويسنده , , Matthew، نويسنده ,
DocumentNumber
3541299
Title Of Article
The end of economic growth? A contracting threshold hypothesis
شماره ركورد
3236
Latin Abstract
This paper argues that GDP growth in both developed and developing countries has associated costs that can outweigh the benefits and thus reduce sustainable well-being. This conclusion is based upon the findings of empirical applications of the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) to a range of countries in the Asia-Pacific region. The studies conducted on seven Asia-Pacific countries indicate that, in the case of five of the seven nations, more recent GDP growth has reduced the sustainable well-being experienced by the average citizen residing within them. Moreover, the threshold point at which the costs of GDP growth outweigh the benefits appears to be contracting (i.e., occurring at a much lower per capita level of GDP). This paper therefore introduces a new contracting threshold hypothesis: as the economies of the Asia-Pacific region and the world collectively expand in a globalised economic environment, there is a contraction over time in the threshold level of per capita GDP. As a consequence, the threshold point confronting growth late-comers (i.e., developing countries) occurs at a much lower level of sustainable welfare than what wealthy nations currently enjoy. The consequences of this for developing countries are clearly significant and require a new approach to economic development.
From Page
2213
NaturalLanguageKeyword
GPI , Economic growth , Asia-Pacific region , Threshold hypothesis
JournalTitle
Studia Iranica
To Page
2223
To Page
2223
Link To Document