
Contents
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1.1. Introduction 1.1. Introduction
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1.2. Getting Growth Going Is Difficult 1.2. Getting Growth Going Is Difficult
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1.3. Why Is It So Difficult to Get Growth Going? 1.3. Why Is It So Difficult to Get Growth Going?
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1.4. Bringing Politics Back In 1.4. Bringing Politics Back In
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1.5. Implications for This Study 1.5. Implications for This Study
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1.6. Conclusion 1.6. Conclusion
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1 Getting Growth Going Is Difficult and Rare
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Published:October 2016
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Abstract
High sustained growth is hard to achieve and is rare in the developing world—since 1960 only nine developing countries have been able to achieve it. Clearly, answering the question of how and why dictators and democrats in three of the fast growers, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand (IMT), have been able to do so is extremely important, especially given the generally poor economic performance of autocracies and democracies elsewhere in the developing world. The focus in this chapter is to demonstrate that neither the neoliberal Washington Consensus nor the Northeast Asian developmental state shed much light on the successful political economies of development in IMT. This opens the pathway to developing an alternative political economy of development model, one that is likely to be much more useful to the Rest.
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