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  • Video

    #DevTalks: The Case of Knowledge-Intensive Services in Costa Rica

    Speaker: Andres Valenciano, John F. Kennedy Fellow, HKS MC/MPA ’23 Moderator: Alejandro Rueda-Sanz, Research Fellow, Growth Lab About the speaker: Andres is currently a John F. Kennedy Fellow at the […]
  • Working Papers

    Frankel, J., 2012

    What Small Countries Can Teach the World

    The large economies have each, in sequence, offered “models” that once seemed attractive to others but that eventually gave way to disillusionment. Small countries may have some answers. They are […]
    Growth Lab

    The large economies have each, in sequence, offered “models” that once seemed attractive to others but that eventually gave way to disillusionment. Small countries may have some answers. They are often better able to experiment with innovative policies and institutions and some of the results are worthy of emulation. This article gives an array of examples. Some of them come from small advanced countries: New Zealand’s Inflation Targeting, Estonia’s flat tax, Switzerland’s debt brake, Ireland’s FDI policy, Canada’s banking structure, Sweden’s Nordic model, and the Netherlands’ labor market reforms. Some examples come from countries that were considered “developing” 40 years ago, but have since industrialized. Korea stands for education; among Singapore’s innovative polices were forced saving and traffic congestion pricing; Costa Rica and Mauritius outperformed their respective regions by, among other policies, foreswearing standing armies; and Mexico experimented successfully with the original Conditional Cash Transfers. A final set of examples come from countries that export mineral and agricultural commodities — historically vulnerable to the “resource curse” — but that have learned how to avoid the pitfalls: Chile’s structural budget rules, Mexico’s oil option hedging, and Botswana’s “Pula Fund.”