References
- Abramovitz, M. (1986). Catching up, forging ahead, and falling behind. The Journal of Economic History, 46, 385–406.
- Aiyar, S., Duval, R., Puy, D., Wu, Y., & Zhang, L. (2013). Growth slowdowns and the middle income trap (Working Paper WP/13/71). Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund.
- Albuquerque, E., Suzigan, W., Arza, V., & Dutrénit, G. (2015). Matrices of university-firm interactions in Latin America. In E. Albuquerque, W. Suzigan, G. Kruss, & K. Lee (Eds.), Developing national systems of innovation. University-industry interactions in the Global South (pp. 194–218). Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
- Alcorta, L., & Peres, W. (1998). Innovation systems and technological specialization in Latin America and the Caribbean. Research Policy, 26, 857–881.
- Alvarado, J., & Padilla, R. (2017). Política industrial y cambio structural en México [Industrial policy and structural change in Mexico]. In M. Cimoli, M. Castillo, G. Porcile, & G. Stumpo (Eds.), Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en América Latina [Industrial and technology policies in Latin America] (pp. 369–409). Santiago: CEPAL.
- Álvarez, C., & Sutin, T. (2017). Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en Chile: El desafio de la transformación productive [Industrial and technology policies in Chile: The challenge of productive transformation]. In M. Cimoli, M. Castillo, G. Porcile, & G. Stumpo (Eds.), Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en América Latina [Industrial and technology policies in Latin America] (pp. 175–230). Santiago: CEPAL.
- Amsden, A. (2001). The rise of ‘the rest:’ Challenges to the West from late industrializing economies. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Andreoni, A., & Chang, H.-J. (2014, June). Agricultural policy and the role of intermediate institutions in production capabilities transformation: Fundación Chile and Embrapa in action. Paper presented at the GRUID Society Conference, Copenhagen.
- Asian Development Bank. (2017). Asian development outlook 2017. Mandaluong City, PH: Author.
- Bértola, L., & Ocampo, J. A. (2012). The economic development of Latin America since independence. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Braga de Andrade, R., & Afif Domingos, G. (2017). Policies and institutions fostering innovation and agriculture technologies in Brazil. In S. Dutta, B. Lanvin, & S. Wunsch-Vincent (Eds.), The Global innovation index 2017 (pp. 121–127). Ithaca, Fontainebleau: Cornell University, INSEAD, & WIPO.
- Cimoli, M., Castillo, M., Porcile, G., & Stumpo, G. (Eds). (2017). Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en América Latina [Industrial and technology policies in Latin America]. Santiago: CEPAL.
- Cimoli, M., Dosi, G., & Stiglitz, J. (2009). The political economy of capabilities accumulation: The past and future of policies of industrial development. In M. Cimoli, G. Dosi, & J. Stiglitz (Eds.), Industrial policy and development. The political economy of capabilities accumulation (pp. 1–16). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Cimoli, M., Dosi, G., & Stiglitz, J. (2015). The rationale for industrial and innovation policy. Intereconomics, 126–132.
- Dahlman, C. J. (2009). Growth and development in China and India: The role of industrial policy in rapid catch-up. In M. Cimoli, G. Dosi, & J. Stiglitz (Eds.), Industrial policy and development. The political economy of capability accumulation (pp. 303–335). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Daude, C. (2010). Innovation, productivity and economic development in Latin America and the Caribbean (Working Paper No. 288). Paris: OECD Development Centre.
- De Vries, G., Timmer, M., & de Vries, K. (2013). Structural transformation in Africa: Static gains, dynamic losses (GDC Research Memorandum 136). Groningen: Groningen Growth and Development Centre.
- Doner, R., & Schneider, B. (2016). The middle income trap. More politics than economics. World Politics, 68, 608–644.
- Dussel Peters, E., & Gallagher, K. P. (2013). NAFTA’s uninvited guest: China and the disintegration of North American trade. CEPAL Review, 110, 83–108.
- Dutrénit, G., & Arza, V. (2015). Features of interactions between public research organizations and industry in Latin America: The perspective of researchers and firms. In E. Albuquerque, W. Suzigan, G. Kruss, & K. Lee (Eds.), Developing national systems of innovation. University-industry interactions in the Global South (pp. 93–119). Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
- ECLAC. (2010). Time for equality. Closing gaps, opening trails. Santiago, Chile: Author.
- Eichengreen, B., Park, D., & Shin, K. (2011). When fast-growing economies slow down: International evidence and implications for China (NBER Working Paper Series, WP 16919). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
- Eichengreen, B., Park, D., & Shin, K. (2013). Growth slowdowns redux: New evidence on the middle-income trap (NBER Paper Series (WP 18673)). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
- Felipe, J., Abdon, A., & Kumar, U. (2012). Tracking the middle income trap: What Is it? Who is in it, and why? (Working Paper No. 715). Annendale-on-Hudson, NY: Levy Economics Institute of Bard College.
- Felipe, J., Kumar, U., & Galope, R. (2017). Middle-income transitions: Trap or myth? Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, 22, 429–453.
- Foxley, A. (2012). La trampa del ingreso cedio. El desafío de esta década para América Latina [The middle income trap: The challenge of this decade for Latin America]. Santiago, Chile: CIEPLAN.
- Gallagher, K., & Porzecanski, R. (2010). The Dragon in the room. China and the future of Latin American industrialization. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
- Gill, I., & Kharas, H. (2008). An East Asia renaissance. Ideas for economic growth. Washington, DC: World Bank.
- Hausmann, R., Hwang, J., & Rodrik, D. (2007). What you export matters. Journal of Economic Growth, 12, 1–25.
- Hochstetler, K., & Montero, A. (2013). The renewed developmental state: The national development bank and the Brazil model. Journal of Development Studies, 49, 1484–1499.
- Jenkins, R. (2014). Chinese competition and Brazilian exports of manufactures. Oxford Development Studies, 42, 395–418.
- Jenkins, R., & der Freitas Barbosa, A. (2012). Fear for manufacturing? China and the future for manufacturing in Brazil and Latin America. China Quarterly, 59–81.
- Katz, J. (2001). Structural reforms and technological behavior: The sources and nature of technological change in Latin America in the 1990s. Research Policy, 30, 1–19.
- Lall, S. (2000). The technology and performance of developing country manufactured exports 1985-1998. Oxford Development Studies, 28, 337–369.
- Lall, S. (2001). Competitiveness, technology, and skills. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
- Laplane, M., & Laplane, A. (2017). Planes industriales y los desafíos del desarrollo sostenible in Brasil. [Industrial plans and the challenges of sustainable development in Brazil]. In M. Cimoli, M. Castillo, G. Porcile, & G. Stumpo (Eds.), Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en América Latina [Industrial and technology policies in Latin America] (pp. 133–174). Santiago: CEPAL.
- Lavarello, P., & Mancini, P. (2017). Política industrial y recuperación manufacturera en Argentina. [Industrial policy and recovery of manufacturing in Argentina]. In M. Cimoli, M. Castillo, G. Porcile, & G. Stumpo (Eds.), Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en América Latina [Industrial and technology policies in Latin America] (pp. 79–132). Santiago: CEPAL.
- Lee, K. (2013). How can Korea be a role model for catch-up development? In A. Fosu (Ed.), Achieving development success: Strategies and lessons from the developing world (pp. 25–49). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- McMillan, M., & Rodrik, D. (2011). Globalization, structural change and productivity growth (Working Paper 17143). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
- Melguizo, A., Nieto-Parra, S., Perea, J. R., & Perez, J. A. (2017). No sympathy for the devil! Policy priorities to overcome the middle income trap in Latin America (Working Paper No. 340). Paris: OECD Development Centre.
- Moreno-Brid, J. C., & Dutrénit, G. (coordinators). (2018). El panorama de las políticas de desarrollo productivo en México [Overview of productive development policies in Mexico]. México: Oficina de País de la OIT para México y Cuba.
- Nelson, R., & Winter, S. (1982). An evolutionary theory of economic change. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Ocampo, J. A., Rada, C., & Taylor, L. (2009). Growth and policy in developing countries. A structuralist approach. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
- Ohno, K. (2009). The middle income trap. Implications for industrialization strategies in East Asia and Africa. Tokyo: GRIPS Development Forum, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.
- Pagés, C. (2010). The age of productivity. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan and Inter-American Development Bank.
- Paus, E. (2012). Confronting the middle income trap: Insights from small latecomers. Studies in Comparative International Development, 47(2), 115–138.
- Paus, E. (2014). Latin America and the middle income trap (Series Financing for Development 250). Santiago, Chile: CEPAL.
- Paus, E. (Ed.). (2018). Confronting dystopia: The new technological revolution and the future of work. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
- Perez, C. (2015). The new context for industrializing around natural resources: An opportunity for Latin America (and other resource rich countries) (Working Papers in Technology Governance and Economic Dynamics No. 62).
- Ramírez, J. M., & Higuera, L. (2017). Cambio estructural y desarrollo sostenible en Colombia [Structrual change and sustainable development in Colombia]. In M. Cimoli, M. Castillo, G. Porcile, & G. Stumpo (Eds.), Políticas industriales y tecnológicas en América Latina [Industrial and technology policies in Latin America] (pp. 277–313). Santiago: CEPAL.
- Robertson, P., & Ye, L. (2013). On the existence of the middle income trap. Business School (Discussion Paper 13.12). Crawley, WA: University of Western Australia.
- Rodrik, D. (2008). Normalizing industrial policy (Working Paper No. 3). Washington, DC: Commission on Growth and Development. World Bank.
- Rodrik, D. (2015). Premature Deindustrialization (Working Paper 20935). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
- Schneider, B. (2015). Designing industrial policy in Latin America: Business-state relations and the new developmentalism. New York, NY: Palgrave Pivot.
- Shadlen, K., & Fonseca, E. (2013). Health policy as industrial policy. Brazil in comparative perspective. Politics and Society, 41, 561–587.
- Stiglitz, J., & Lin, J. (Eds.). (2013). The industrial policy revolution. The role of government beyond ideology. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Timmer, M. P., de Vries, G., & de Vries, K. (2014). Patterns of structural change in developing countries (Research Memorandum 149). Groningen: Groningen Growth and Development Center.
- UNESCO Institute for Statistics. (2015). Summary report of the 2013 UIS innovation data collection (Information Paper No. 24). Montreal: UNESCO.
- UNIDO. (2016). International Yearbook of Industrial Statistics 2016. Vienna: Author.
- Yusuf, S., & Nabeshima, K. (2009). Can Malaysia escape the middle income trap? (Policy Research Working Paper 4971). Washington, DC: World Bank Development Research Group.