01755nam a22002537a 4500003000400000005001700004008004100021022001400062022001400076040001700090041000800107100002500115245004700140260004100187300001700228362006300245520098800308630003101296650002501327650002601352650001701378650002301395856008301418OSt20260515115330.0260121b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a0963-8024 a1464-3723 aTBSbENcTBS aeng aRodrik, Danieauthor aAn African growth miracle?c/ Dani Rodrik. bJournal of African Economies,c2018. a10-27 pages. aJournal of African economies, 2018-01, Vol.27 (1), p.10-27 aAfrica's recent growth performance has raised expectations of a bright economic future for the continent after decades of decline. Yet there is a genuine question about whether Africa's growth can be sustained, and if so, at what level. The balance of the evidence suggests caution on the prospects for high growth. While the region's fundamentals have improved, the payoffs to macroeconomic stability and improved governance are mainly to foster resilience and lay the groundwork for growth, rather than to generate productivity growth on their own. The traditional engines behind rapid growth, structural change and industrialization, seem to be operating at less than full power. If African countries do achieve growth rates substantially higher, they will have to do so pursuing a growth model that is different from earlier miracles based on industrialization. This might be agriculture-led or services-led growth, but it will look quite different than what we have seen before. 0aMSc International Business 0aDeveloping countries 0aDevelopment economics 0aProductivity 0aService industries uhttps://research-ebsco-com.hub.tbs-education.fr/c/q5dvh4/viewer/pdf/lfp6e4byyz