How To Save Globalization
How To Save Globalization
How To Save Globalization
Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. E-mail: dani_rodrik@harvard.edu. I thank several commentators on my blog, in particular Paine, Steveb, and Andrew, for catching mistakes and typos.
Dani Rodrik
globalization or the transition period between 1973-90. Second, and perhaps even more tellingly, the countries that did best under each one of these periods were hardly poster children for open markets and laissez-faire economics. These countries combined orthodoxy on some (mostly macroeconomic) policy fronts with a good bit of heterodoxy on others (especially in microeconomic policies). Japan, South Korea, and China each played by very different rules than those enunciated by the guardians of orthodox globalizationmultilateral institutions such as the World Bank, IMF, and GATT/WTO and by Western-based academics.
Figure 1: The Expanding Growth Frontier
Historical experience with growth
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
GDP per capita growth rate of fastest growing country/region (annual average, %)
In this paper I present a forward-looking evaluation of globalization. I accept as my premise that globalization, in some appropriate form, is a major engine of economic growth (as Figure 1 amply demonstrates). However, I will argue that several paradoxical features require us to rethink its rules. First, as I already indicated, globalizations chief