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Asian Regional Income, Growth, and Distribution to 2030. Asian Development Review, Vol. 27(2), pp. 57-81

dc.contributor.authorDavid Roland-Holst
dc.contributor.authorGuntur Sugiyarto
dc.contributor.authorYinshan Loh
dc.date.accessioned2015-01-24T13:10:27Z
dc.date.available2015-01-24T13:10:27Z
dc.date.issued2010-08-27T13:10:27Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11540/1665
dc.description.abstractAs Asia consolidates the economic gains and policy lessons of two generations, it can look to a bright future of sustained growth. More effective policies will even accelerate this growth, provided they recognize the essential agents of trade and productivity growth, as well as the importance of promoting domestic regional demand. Rising incomes promise greater homegrown demand for domestic producers and essential diversification for regional exporters. This study surveys historical income distribution data from 22 Asian economies, projects the emergence of middle classes in the next 20 years, and examines its role in Asian economies. The study also examines the drivers of growth over this periond using a dynamic computable general equilibrium (CGE) model to forecast GDP and consumption trends. The findings suggest that Asia can sustain and even accelerate current patterns of poverty reduction and livelihood advancement beyond poverty. Over the next 20 years, about 1 billion people will be added to the 2.7 billion Asian middle class (based on $2-a- day PPP standard). The rate of middle class emergence will be uneven across the region and will depend mostly on initial conditions. The results also suggest that energy price vulnerability is a critical risk to regional growth—and calls for energy efficiency measures to insure against this risk. The agricultural productivity growth can improve both the incomes of the majority of Asia’s rural poor and the purchasing power of urbanites. Policies that reduce both energy and food costs can therefore be a potent source of new demand for products and services as well as jobs. Finally, given the importance of labor resources to Asian growth, skills development is the most critical prerequisite for realizing the vast economic potential of Asia. Higher incomes, a larger middle class, and self-sustaining prosperity can only be built on the foundation of a skilled and productive labor force that captures significant value added and channels higher incomes into sustained long-term expenditure, savings, and investment.
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherAsian Development Bank
dc.rightsCC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.titleAsian Regional Income, Growth, and Distribution to 2030. Asian Development Review, Vol. 27(2), pp. 57-81
dc.typeJournals
dc.subject.adbEconomic growth
dc.subject.adbTrade
dc.title.seriesAsian Development Review
dc.title.volumeVolume 27, Number 2, pp. 57-81
dc.contributor.imprintAsian Development Bank
oar.themeDevelopment
oar.themeTrade
oar.themeLabor Migration
oar.identifierOAR-002515
oar.authorRoland-Holst, David
oar.authorSugiyarto, Guntur
oar.authorLoh, Yinshan
oar.importtrue
oar.googlescholar.linkpresenttrue


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  • Asian Development Review
    The Asian Development Review (ADR) is a professional journal for disseminating the results of economic and development research relevant to Asia and the Pacific. Since 1983, the ADR has been an important part of the history of the Asian Development Bank and its mission to reduce poverty across Asia and the Pacific.

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