The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica
Jamaica's economic history is one of paradoxes, and potential - it has an English-speaking, and reasonably well-educated labor force, is close to the world's largest market, the United States, and, has an abundance of natural beauty, whic...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Publication |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3772191/road-sustained-growth-jamaica http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15014 |
id |
okr-10986-15014 |
---|---|
recordtype |
oai_dc |
spelling |
okr-10986-150142021-04-23T14:03:12Z The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica World Bank ECONOMIC GROWTH POVERTY INCIDENCE POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY REDUCTION GROWTH PATTERNS REFORM POLICY EDUCATION & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STUDENT ENROLLMENT MACROECONOMIC POLICY EMPLOYMENT POTENTIAL SOCIOECONOMIC INDICATORS INVESTMENT POLICY GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT REFORM IMPLEMENTATION POLICY FRAMEWORK SOCIAL SAFETY NETS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES CRIME DETERRENCE SOCIAL DIALOGUES CONSENSUS BUILDING ACCOUNTABILITY AGRICULTURE ANNUAL GROWTH BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANKING CRISIS BONDS BUSINESS COMMUNITY BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL USE CITIZEN CLIMATE COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CPI CRIME CRIME RATES CRISES CROWDING OUT DATA COLLECTION DEBT DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DIRECT INVESTMENT DISASTERS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC HISTORY ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMICS EDUCATED WORKERS EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPENDITURES EXPORTS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL SECTOR FISH FREE TRADE GDP GDP PER CAPITA GOVERNANCE INDICATORS GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH PROSPECTS GROWTH RATES HOUSING HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INCOME SHARE INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT RATES LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET LIVING CONDITIONS LOCAL COMMUNITIES LORENZ CURVE MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MIGRATION NATIONAL ACCOUNTS PARENTS PARTNERSHIP POLICY OPTIONS POLICY REFORMS POOR GROWTH POVERTY REDUCTION PRICE INCREASES PRIVATE SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICE QUALITY OF LIFE RAPID GROWTH REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL GDP REAL WAGES SAFETY SAFETY NETS SCHOOLS SHORT-TERM IMPACT SOCIAL COSTS TAX BASE TAX RATES TAX REVENUES TAXATION TERTIARY EDUCATION TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY TRANSPARENCY UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN AREAS URBAN POVERTY VALUE ADDED VICTIMS VIOLENCE WAGES WORKERS WORKPLACE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION WTO YOUTH Jamaica's economic history is one of paradoxes, and potential - it has an English-speaking, and reasonably well-educated labor force, is close to the world's largest market, the United States, and, has an abundance of natural beauty, which has spurred tourism - and, many of its social, and governance indicators are strong, including near universal school enrollment. Poverty rates are below that of comparable countries. Yet, the Jamaican story is marked by the paradoxes of low growth in GDP and high employment, despite high investment, and important achievements in poverty reduction. This paper attempts to explain these paradoxes, and concludes that one possible explanation is that GDP has been understated. Amid these challenges, this report proposes that a "bandwagon" approach to reforms may be needed to improve prospects for sustained growth, with policy actions on several fronts, including measures to avert crisis, while continuing to strengthen social safety nets, as well as short- and long-term policies, such as reducing the growth of public expenditure, and tackling crime. Given that policy choices are likely to be difficult, it argues that an approach based on social dialogue, and consensus building is essential to create ownership for future reforms among all stakeholders. 2013-08-12T18:18:51Z 2013-08-12T18:18:51Z 2004-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3772191/road-sustained-growth-jamaica 0-8213-5826-X http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15014 English en_US World Bank Country Study; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication Latin America & Caribbean Jamaica |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ECONOMIC GROWTH POVERTY INCIDENCE POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY REDUCTION GROWTH PATTERNS REFORM POLICY EDUCATION & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STUDENT ENROLLMENT MACROECONOMIC POLICY EMPLOYMENT POTENTIAL SOCIOECONOMIC INDICATORS INVESTMENT POLICY GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT REFORM IMPLEMENTATION POLICY FRAMEWORK SOCIAL SAFETY NETS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES CRIME DETERRENCE SOCIAL DIALOGUES CONSENSUS BUILDING ACCOUNTABILITY AGRICULTURE ANNUAL GROWTH BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANKING CRISIS BONDS BUSINESS COMMUNITY BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL USE CITIZEN CLIMATE COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CPI CRIME CRIME RATES CRISES CROWDING OUT DATA COLLECTION DEBT DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DIRECT INVESTMENT DISASTERS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC HISTORY ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMICS EDUCATED WORKERS EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPENDITURES EXPORTS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL SECTOR FISH FREE TRADE GDP GDP PER CAPITA GOVERNANCE INDICATORS GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH PROSPECTS GROWTH RATES HOUSING HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INCOME SHARE INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT RATES LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET LIVING CONDITIONS LOCAL COMMUNITIES LORENZ CURVE MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MIGRATION NATIONAL ACCOUNTS PARENTS PARTNERSHIP POLICY OPTIONS POLICY REFORMS POOR GROWTH POVERTY REDUCTION PRICE INCREASES PRIVATE SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICE QUALITY OF LIFE RAPID GROWTH REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL GDP REAL WAGES SAFETY SAFETY NETS SCHOOLS SHORT-TERM IMPACT SOCIAL COSTS TAX BASE TAX RATES TAX REVENUES TAXATION TERTIARY EDUCATION TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY TRANSPARENCY UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN AREAS URBAN POVERTY VALUE ADDED VICTIMS VIOLENCE WAGES WORKERS WORKPLACE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION WTO YOUTH |
spellingShingle |
ECONOMIC GROWTH POVERTY INCIDENCE POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY REDUCTION GROWTH PATTERNS REFORM POLICY EDUCATION & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STUDENT ENROLLMENT MACROECONOMIC POLICY EMPLOYMENT POTENTIAL SOCIOECONOMIC INDICATORS INVESTMENT POLICY GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT REFORM IMPLEMENTATION POLICY FRAMEWORK SOCIAL SAFETY NETS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES CRIME DETERRENCE SOCIAL DIALOGUES CONSENSUS BUILDING ACCOUNTABILITY AGRICULTURE ANNUAL GROWTH BALANCE OF PAYMENTS BANKING CRISIS BONDS BUSINESS COMMUNITY BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL USE CITIZEN CLIMATE COMPETITIVENESS CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CPI CRIME CRIME RATES CRISES CROWDING OUT DATA COLLECTION DEBT DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DIRECT INVESTMENT DISASTERS ECONOMIC CONDITIONS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC HISTORY ECONOMIC POLICY ECONOMICS EDUCATED WORKERS EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPENDITURES EXPORTS FINANCIAL CRISIS FINANCIAL SECTOR FISH FREE TRADE GDP GDP PER CAPITA GOVERNANCE INDICATORS GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH PROSPECTS GROWTH RATES HOUSING HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INCOME SHARE INFLATION INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVESTMENT RATES LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET LIVING CONDITIONS LOCAL COMMUNITIES LORENZ CURVE MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MIGRATION NATIONAL ACCOUNTS PARENTS PARTNERSHIP POLICY OPTIONS POLICY REFORMS POOR GROWTH POVERTY REDUCTION PRICE INCREASES PRIVATE SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICE QUALITY OF LIFE RAPID GROWTH REAL EXCHANGE RATE REAL GDP REAL WAGES SAFETY SAFETY NETS SCHOOLS SHORT-TERM IMPACT SOCIAL COSTS TAX BASE TAX RATES TAX REVENUES TAXATION TERTIARY EDUCATION TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADE LIBERALIZATION TRADE POLICY TRANSPARENCY UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN AREAS URBAN POVERTY VALUE ADDED VICTIMS VIOLENCE WAGES WORKERS WORKPLACE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION WTO YOUTH World Bank The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica |
geographic_facet |
Latin America & Caribbean Jamaica |
relation |
World Bank Country Study; |
description |
Jamaica's economic history is one
of paradoxes, and potential - it has an English-speaking,
and reasonably well-educated labor force, is close to the
world's largest market, the United States, and, has an
abundance of natural beauty, which has spurred tourism -
and, many of its social, and governance indicators are
strong, including near universal school enrollment. Poverty
rates are below that of comparable countries. Yet, the
Jamaican story is marked by the paradoxes of low growth in
GDP and high employment, despite high investment, and
important achievements in poverty reduction. This paper
attempts to explain these paradoxes, and concludes that one
possible explanation is that GDP has been understated. Amid
these challenges, this report proposes that a
"bandwagon" approach to reforms may be needed to
improve prospects for sustained growth, with policy actions
on several fronts, including measures to avert crisis, while
continuing to strengthen social safety nets, as well as
short- and long-term policies, such as reducing the growth
of public expenditure, and tackling crime. Given that policy
choices are likely to be difficult, it argues that an
approach based on social dialogue, and consensus building is
essential to create ownership for future reforms among all stakeholders. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Publication |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica |
title_short |
The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica |
title_full |
The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica |
title_fullStr |
The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Road to Sustained Growth in Jamaica |
title_sort |
road to sustained growth in jamaica |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3772191/road-sustained-growth-jamaica http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15014 |
_version_ |
1764425971132268544 |