Arbor Angels
History suggests that internal economic policies fight poverty best
August 18, 2005
By Dani Rodrik, TomPaine.com
G8 nations talk as if the pairing of free trade and aid is the key to economic salvation for every country struggling with the realities of poverty. But providing aid, relieving debt, and increasing developing countries' access to privileged markets are not the answers to lessening economic hardship, Dani Rodrik argues on TomPaine.com. As the cases of Vietnam and Mexico demonstrate, it's internal policies that do the most to boost economies.
RELATED CONTENT
Environmentally conscious brewing is on the rise.......
Crossing Division Street September 11, 2002 Issue By Abbie Jarman Crossing Division Street, Jim Sc...
E-activists rally on the Web, but can they build a movement?...
Satirewire's 2nd Annual Poetry Slam Spam Arts Extra Special Sara V. Buckwitz Satirewire's ...
Vietnam hasn't received any economic favors from the West. It couldn't borrow from the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank. And though the United States lifted its embargo on the country in 1994, Vietnam still isn't part of the World Trade Organization. Mexico, on the other hand, has fostered close economic ties with the United States in the form of the North American Free Trade Agreement, US investment, and the ability for Mexican citizens to work across the border. While the economy of Vietnam grew annually at 5.6 percent per capita between its 1988 reforms and 1995 (and has grown 4.5 percent annually since then), Mexico's economy has inched along with a growth rate of 1 percent per capita since signing NAFTA in 1992.
A broader global trend illustrates that, as with Vietnam and Mexico, the countries that institute strong economic development programs internally succeed in improving economic growth and alleviating poverty. South Korea, China, and India all pulled their economies up by their bootstraps, according to Rodrik, and all three have flourishing economies today.