Moving Barbados Forward

MOVING BARBADOS FORWARD Abstract Jay R. Mandle More than forty years ago, Simon Kuznets on the occasion of receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics, distinguished between economic expansion based on the exploitation of natural resources and the process he described as "modern economic growth.&quo...

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Main Author: mandle, jay r
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons @ Colgate 2014
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Online Access:https://commons.colgate.edu/econ_facschol/39
https://commons.colgate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=econ_facschol
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spelling ftcolgateuniv:oai:commons.colgate.edu:econ_facschol-1038 2023-05-15T16:49:29+02:00 Moving Barbados Forward mandle, jay r 2014-04-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://commons.colgate.edu/econ_facschol/39 https://commons.colgate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=econ_facschol unknown Digital Commons @ Colgate https://commons.colgate.edu/econ_facschol/39 https://commons.colgate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=econ_facschol Economics Faculty Working Papers Economics text 2014 ftcolgateuniv 2020-07-17T12:57:56Z MOVING BARBADOS FORWARD Abstract Jay R. Mandle More than forty years ago, Simon Kuznets on the occasion of receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics, distinguished between economic expansion based on the exploitation of natural resources and the process he described as "modern economic growth." The latter involved expansion based on continuous technological change, structural transformation, and institutional adjustment. The former required only natural resource exploitation. Barbados' current fiscal crisis is rooted in the fact that its high per capita income is dependent on sand, sea, and sun - its well-developed tourism industry. But it did not develop the ability to innovate. As a result its economic future is problematic. That smallness of size is not an impenetrable obstacle to its becoming dynamic is illustrated by Iceland, a country with a comparable population size but a technologically progressive economy. Barbados needs to break with its policies of the past and adopt those that will as allow it to achieve modern economic growth. Text Iceland Colgate University: Digital Commons @ Colgate
institution Open Polar
collection Colgate University: Digital Commons @ Colgate
op_collection_id ftcolgateuniv
language unknown
topic Economics
spellingShingle Economics
mandle, jay r
Moving Barbados Forward
topic_facet Economics
description MOVING BARBADOS FORWARD Abstract Jay R. Mandle More than forty years ago, Simon Kuznets on the occasion of receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics, distinguished between economic expansion based on the exploitation of natural resources and the process he described as "modern economic growth." The latter involved expansion based on continuous technological change, structural transformation, and institutional adjustment. The former required only natural resource exploitation. Barbados' current fiscal crisis is rooted in the fact that its high per capita income is dependent on sand, sea, and sun - its well-developed tourism industry. But it did not develop the ability to innovate. As a result its economic future is problematic. That smallness of size is not an impenetrable obstacle to its becoming dynamic is illustrated by Iceland, a country with a comparable population size but a technologically progressive economy. Barbados needs to break with its policies of the past and adopt those that will as allow it to achieve modern economic growth.
format Text
author mandle, jay r
author_facet mandle, jay r
author_sort mandle, jay r
title Moving Barbados Forward
title_short Moving Barbados Forward
title_full Moving Barbados Forward
title_fullStr Moving Barbados Forward
title_full_unstemmed Moving Barbados Forward
title_sort moving barbados forward
publisher Digital Commons @ Colgate
publishDate 2014
url https://commons.colgate.edu/econ_facschol/39
https://commons.colgate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=econ_facschol
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Economics Faculty Working Papers
op_relation https://commons.colgate.edu/econ_facschol/39
https://commons.colgate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1038&context=econ_facschol
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